An Ethical Review of Social Work Intervention in Juvenile Judicial Correction
Abstract
The law provides a rigid framework to regulate the behavior of juveniles involved in crimes, while the participation of social work provides them with flexible services and humanistic care. The principles of social work such as acceptance, individualization, non-judgment, confidentiality, and professional ethics highlight its professional strengths. Social workers provide services to clients within the framework of ethical codes, but sometimes the ethical codes may be affected by real situations. This paper takes the case of the social work agency where I used to work as a research object to find out the ethical dilemmas in juvenile justice social work services and explore the alternative paths of ethical choices.
Copyright (c) 2022 Liye Dong

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Copyright on any open access article in a journal published by PiscoMed Publishing is retained by the author(s).
Authors grant PiscoMed Publishing a license to publish, copy, distribute, and convey the article.
The current adopted license, the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), formalizes these and other terms and conditions of publishing articles. The license (CC BY 4.0) means:
Share: Everyone can copy and redistribute the open-access content in the journal.
Adapt: Materials in the articles can be remixed, reused, and reanalyzed for any purpose.
Attribution: You must cite the source with the correct license if some changes to the materials are made, but that does not mean that the licensor endorses you or your use.
Authors should ensure that the content of the article is not involved in a copyright dispute before submitting it. For previously published articles, authors should obtain permission from the copyright holder if the material is under a more restrictive license.
References
Xi XH., (2021). Basis and Motivation of Juvenile Judicial Social Work Service.China Social Work (03),10.https://kns.cnki.net/ kcms/detail/detail.aspx? File Name=ZSGZ202103007&DbName= CJFQ2021.
Shen, L., Lu, JS., and Liao ML., (2021).Three Claaical Theoretical Approaches to Social Work Ethics.Social Work(01), 31-42+106. https://kns.cnki.net/kcms/detail/ detail.aspx?FileName=SHGO202101004&Db Name=CJFQ2021.
Kroska, A., and James, DL., and Nicole T. Carr. (2017). Juvenile Delinquency and Self-Sentiments: Exploring a Labeling Theory Proposition*. Social Science Quarterly, 98(1), pp. 73-88.
Shen, L., (2012).The Ethical Dilemmas and Decision Making in Indigenous Social Work Practice. Social Work(02), 25-30.