Suche books:   





No Place for Children: Voices from Juvenile Detention (Bill and Alice Wright Photography Series)
Steve Liss

University of Texas Press, 2005 - 151 pages

average customer review:based on 4 reviews
view larger image
 for more information click here






Very Important, Beautiful Book

This is one of the most important books out there about our nation's children, and about correction in general. The photographs of the children are beautiful, honest, and heartbreaking. A powerful testimony to the state of our nation, which allows such hopelessnss to befall our children, their families, and our communities.


Required reading for anyone interested in juvenile justice and the child welfare system in America

I'd like to see this book released in a smaller paperback edition, instead of the 'coffee table format' which is oversized, heavy and not conducive to reading. The message that the book conveys is vitally important, and should be easier to read and take along with you. The fonts chosen make the text almost impossible to read on some pages, as the color melts into the page. I'd like to be able to read this and buy copies for others to read as well. Maybe that's a strange complaint, that a coffee table book should have been published as a mass-market or trade paperback, but this is an important book that should be made widely available to encourage more people to buy it.


The photographs are simple and disturbing. The author readily acknowledges that some juveniles deserve to be behind bars, but not all of them are criminals. In Texas, as in most states, status offenders (runaways, habitual truants) are housed in juvenile detention centers with accused rapists and murderers. The child who enters the doors of the juvenile hall as a status offender may very well leave as a budding criminal, even after just a few weeks of being locked up.

The story isn't unique to Texas. Children who need mental health services, diversion programs, and drug rehab are out of luck if their families aren't well-insured. Like the adult prisons of America, our juvenile halls have become a dumping ground for children and young adults who are mentally ill or addicted to drugs. The author doesn't try to come up with pie in the sky solutions, because there aren't any to be found.


 for more information click here









 for more information click here


Beautiful Tragedies

Mr. Liss has managed to capture the humanity of this forgotten group of youth with an obvious awareness of his subject material. Having worked with similar youth, I found the book heartbreaking. I have a copy on my coffee-table, and have purchased several copies for friends and acquaintences. We should be doing better for our children...






Amazing!

Steve's work is this book is utterly amazing. His insight into the lives of these children is insightful. The photography truly speaks to you - you feel the photos in your heart - you can hear these kids speaking to you from the pages.

Steve has done a fantastic job of showing many of us a whole different side of life.


 for more information click here



"Here are our fellow human beings?young Americans who have already, alas, lived hard and mean lives, yet who aspire to know more about themselves and others, and who well deserve the careful, respectful, thoughtful attention shown them by a talented, resourceful photographer and writer. By bringing them up close to us, Steve Liss helps us know our country better and the various destinies it offers for those who will one day be its working, voting, citizens."

?Robert Coles, James Agee Professor of Social Ethics, Harvard University

"A heartbreaking and harrowing examination of a subject that has been largely veiled in secrecy. Steve Liss's photographs give us an intimate glimpse into the pain and confusion of these troubled children and offer disturbing insights into America's juvenile justice system."

?Jim Kelly, Managing Editor, Time magazine

"The photographs in Steve Liss's No Place for Children are startling for their humanity and for their revelations. They'll make you sit up in anger, in despair, and in hope. In thinking about what to do with our children who go astray, this is the place to begin."

?Alex Kotlowitz, author of There Are No Children Here: The Story of Two Boys Growing Up in the Other America

"These powerful photographs in No Place for Children illuminate what may well be the darkest and least explainable corner of our society?the tragedy of our juvenile justice system. Children who desperately need an education are assigned a prison cell instead, at far greater cost to the federal, state and local treasures. The neglect they endure behind bars only compounds the likelihood they will commit crimes after their release. Steve Liss has performed an extraordinary service for the nation, if we have enough sense to learn from it."

?Senator Edward M. Kennedy

"We rarely see locked-up children because the laws established to protect their privacy have also kept them shut away from view. Fortunately, photographer Steve Liss gained unprecedented access to this hidden world and brings us face to face with some of the young people we are locking away by the multitudes?104,413 in public and private facilities on any given day in 2001. His powerful photographs present a moving testimony to the humanity of some of America's most deeply troubled and misunderstood youth. And the poignant first-person interviews with children, parents, and probation officers shatter the myths that these children are ruthless predators and that incarceration works."

?from the foreword by Marian Wright Edelman, President, Children's Defense Fund

Juvenile crime rates have dropped dramatically since the early 1990s, yet more young people are in juvenile detention today than at any other time in America's history. Most are nonviolent offenders. Many have mental health or substance abuse problems. All have been failed by some combination of their families, schools, churches, and communities. But instead of addressing these young people's needs for treatment, rehabilitation, and basic nurturing, we lock them away in an overburdened juvenile justice system that can do little more than warehouse troubled children.

This courageous work of photojournalism goes inside the system to offer an intimate, often disturbing view of children's experiences in juvenile detention. Steve Liss photographed and interviewed young detainees, their parents, and detention and probation officers in Laredo, Texas. His striking photographs reveal that these are vulnerable children?sometimes as young as ten?coping with a detention environment that most adults would find harsh. In the accompanying text, he brings in the voices of the young people who describe their already fractured lives and fragile dreams, as well as the words of their parents and juvenile justice workers who express frustration at not having more resources with which to help these kids. As Marian Wright Edelman asks in the foreword, "What does it say about us that the only thing our nation will guarantee every child is a costly jail or detention cell, while refusing them a place in Head Start or after-school child care, summer jobs, and other needed supports?" In the best tradition of photojournalism, No Place for Children is a call to action on behalf of America's at-risk youth.




 for more information click here



hot or not?    What's your opinion?     Write a review and share your thoughts!





children

Merriam-Webster Children's Dictionary
2009 Children's Writer's & Illustrator's Market (Children's Writer's ...
Scholastic Children's Dictionary
The Explosive Child: A New Approach for Understanding and Parenting ...
Midnight's Children: A Novel



series

Seabiscuit: An American Legend (G K Hall Large Print Nonfiction ...
October Sky (The Coalwood Series #1)
The Prophet (Kahlil Gibran Pocket Library Series)
The Kingdoms and the Elves of the Reaches (Keeper Martin's Tales ...
Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace . . . One ...



voices

The Photoshop Elements 6 Book for Digital Photographers (Voices That ...
The Adobe Photoshop CS3 Book for Digital Photographers (Voices That ...
Presentation Zen: Simple Ideas on Presentation Design and Delivery ...
Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voices from a Medieval Village
Scott Kelby's 7-Point System for Adobe Photoshop CS3 (Voices)



search for books
no place for, children, detention, juvenile, photography, series, voices, wright


Impressum / about us


Suche books: