About This Book
An examination of how urban environments shape young people's energies, moral impulses, and risks, arguing that weakened domestic life, crowded neighborhoods, and limited supervised recreation push youth toward seeking adventure in gangs, violent encounters, substance use, and petty crime. Drawing on neighborhood cases and settlement-house experience, it analyzes social, economic, and legislative factors that enable vice and suggests community remedies: accessible play and vocational outlets, juvenile clubs, legal reforms, and cooperative social institutions designed to channel enthusiasm into industry and civic-mindedness while satisfying a thirst for adventure and moral purpose.
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