MARIANA CHIES SANTIAGO SANTOS
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Resumo profissional
Área de pesquisa
Nome para créditos
2 resultados
Resultados de Busca
Agora exibindo 1 - 2 de 2
Artigo Científico Adolescentes a Quem Se Atribui a Prática de Ato Infracional: Como as Autoridades do Sistema de Justiça Juvenil Socializam Adolescentes Negros e Pobres de uma Periferia de São Paulo(2021) MARIANA CHIES SANTIAGO SANTOS; Oliveira, Renan Theodoro de; Piccirillo, Debora; Gomes, Aline Morais MizutaniEste trabalho busca articular o campo teórico da socialização legal e os estudos sociológicos sobre o adolescente em situação de conflito com a lei a partir de uma pesquisa qualitativa, baseada em entrevistas semiestruturadas e observação participante, com adolescentes em cumprimento de medidas socioeducativas. A partir da análise preliminar dos dados coletados, observou-se que adolescentes infratores já se relacionam com as autoridades legais (polícia) antes de sua entrada no sistema e, nas audiências para decisão de seus processos, não interagem com os atores do sistema de justiça e não têm entendimento sobre o que se passa.Artigo Científico The role of police contact and neighborhood experiences on legal socialization: Longitudinal evidence from adolescents in Brazil(2021) Piccirillo, Debora; García-Sánchez, Efraín; MARIANA CHIES SANTIAGO SANTOS; Gomes, Aline MizutaniThe legal socialization framework emphasizes the impor tance of adolescents’ encounters with police. We exam ine how different types of police contact and neighbor hood experiences are linked to the legal socialization pro cess among adolescents living in São Paulo, Brazil. Draw ing on 669 participants across three waves of panel data from the São Paulo Legal Socialization Study, results from the multilevel longitudinal model revealed that within person increases in vicarious police contact were linked to a decrease in police legitimacy over time. Exploratory analyses using a multilevel mediation model indicated that the observed negative effect of vicarious police contact was mediated by evaluations of police procedural justice. As for the between-person effects, voluntary police contact posi tively predicted police legitimacy over time. However, the effects of vicarious police contact and violent police contact were mediated by police procedural justice. Additionally, police legitimacy decreased for people who had more expo sure to violence and lower levels of fear of crime. The study revealed that the nature of police contact and levels of expo sure to violence can have important effects on adolescents’ perceptions of police legitimacy, even after accounting for procedural justice.