Summary: This article, based on the author’s doctoral study completed in 2015,
offers new insight into the operation of criminal networks in Ireland and in particular
their influence on children who become engaged in network activities. The research
aimed to explore the role of ‘network’ as an aggravating factor in influencing the
trajectories of children involved in criminal behaviour. The research, based on a case
study design focuses on ‘Greentown’, a real (but anonymised) Garda Sub-District
located outside Dublin.
The study argues that a relatively small number of principal actors directed and
controlled network activity while also actively cultivating the social conditions to
sustain the network’s incumbent hierarchy. The most powerful of these principal
actors belonged to a dominant family and kinship group. This group entered into
‘contracts’ with a range of often very vulnerable ‘associates’ involved in the network.
The paper argues that understanding the nature of such networks and their relational
influence on children’s propensity for serious and multiple offences is a first step in
seeking solutions for policy makers and practitioners in this often hidden and
complex area of youth justice.