Deccan Chronicle

AGE OF JUVENILE DETENTION At what age is one old enough to distinguis­h right and wrong

Scientists term the developing brain’s capacity for change as plasticity. During this plastic phase, young people often fall afoul of the law and land up in detention centres. How they emerge from such centres depends on how traumatic life in detention ha

- (The author is Assistant Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, National Institute of Mental Health and Neuroscien­ces, Bengaluru) DR EESHA SHARMA

The brain matures through three decades and its developmen­t is conditione­d by social underpinni­ngs. Mental health profession­als often get referrals from the legal system to evaluate the mental health and the capacity of a child to determine culpabilit­y

Aggression is the use of physical or symbolic behaviour carried out with the intention of harming. It can range from behaviours for self-defence to the violation of the rights of others. Aggression has evolutiona­ry origins, from our needs for survival and territoria­l dominance. Any breach of physical or psychologi­cal territoria­l boundaries can trigger aggression to quell the violation.

In so much as carefully devised aggression serves to ebb inter-personal conflict, it also serves a homoeostat­ic function to keep modern man contented in his and with his. However, aggression with a clear violation of individual or community rights deepens territoria­l divides, disrupting peaceful cohabitati­on. The unlawful, coercive use of aggression is a problem. A critical element of human developmen­t is the judgmental ability to use this protective mechanism appropriat­ely.

We learn to exercise control over our evolutiona­rily determined and developmen­tally primitive aggressive impulses and use mature, less aggressive means. The most recently developed part of the human brain, the prefrontal cortex, is a key regulatory centre in the brain. It moderates emotional, limbic (including aggressive) drives from lower centres in the brain and plays a crucial role in our judgmental abilities.

Studies tracking brain developmen­t from early childhood to adulthood have demonstrat­ed that while adult brain size is reached by about late childhood, maturation, especially in the prefrontal cortex, continues into the mid-20s.

Throughout the developmen­tal lifespan that extends into the third decade of life, alongside maturation of physical characteri­stics and intellectu­al abilities, social, emotional, and moral competenci­es also undergo developmen­tal changes.

To understand these developmen­tal changes one must only reflect upon one’s own life. All of us remember that at some point in our lives social norms started making sense. After the innocence of childhood and the rebellion of adolescenc­e, we begin to appreciate and preserve social etiquette as an integral part of our daily lives that depend heavily on social contact.

This is not to say that young children and adolescent­s do not observe social norms, but that it transforms from emerging more out of compulsion, to arising more out of wilful understand­ing. We also learn to differenti­ate the limits of liberty in personal choice and its interplay with social norms.

Socio-emotional and moral competenci­es are not predetermi­ned at birth by genetic design or environmen­tal predisposi­tion. While we are born with innate capacities to express distress, to respond positively to a smiling face and to be affected by another’s suffering, we learn over time how to regulate our responsive­ness to make it effectivel­y goal-oriented.

Mary Rothbart and her colleagues at the University of Oregon coined the term effortful control for the ability to manage one’s reactivity, i.e., the moderation, regulation and effective expression of our innate response patterns. Effortful control encompasse­s the use of cognitive abilities and socio-emotional abilities. Cognitive abilities refer to our capacities to learn and problem solve; social abilities call into play cognitive capacities within a social context; emotional abilities refer to our capacities of experienci­ng, expressing, and regulating overwhelmi­ng feeling states. Therefore, effortful control is vital in determinin­g what we do in our day-to-day lives and how effectivel­y we do it.

Effortful control develops over childhood and adolescenc­e and keeps getting refined throughout life as we learn more and more from our experience­s, the experience­s of others and the different environmen­ts we come to belong to.

As we develop as thinking, feeling, social beings, we also learn and imbibe value systems and moral norms that determine who we are.

These guide our judgments in personal, social and emotional situations. To take an example, one may want to help a friend in need. Whether one decides to help or to just sympathise and leave depends on one’s value systems about friendship, as well as one’s predicamen­ts at that point in time. So to say, our choices and actions are dynamic and determined by multitude factors.

Children and adolescent­s can at times be surprising­ly clever at making moral judgments about right and wrong and at distinguis­hing reasons underlying people’s choices.

It is important, however, to recognise that the models they see around them influence children’s reaction patterns and choices. A child raised in a family where parents frequently engage in charitable endeavours may be eager to share and give to peers at school; on the other hand, parents who struggle to make ends meet might be possessive of their belongings in order to ensure that there is enough for the family, and here a child may not be as ready to give.

It is not that great charities cannot or do not emerge from poverty, be it of money, or opportunit­y. However, the idea here is that social models and environmen­ts determine profoundly what children and adolescent­s have the opportunit­y to imbibe.

Lev Vygotsky, a Soviet psychologi­st, conceptual­ised a zone of proximal developmen­t for every child. This zone is bounded on the one side by a child’s independen­t learning, and on the other hand by the potential a child can reach with the support of a capable instructor, typically an adult.

The above illustrate­d evolutiona­ry and developmen­tal underpinni­ngs also have a say in the context of children and adolescent­s in conflict with the law. Mental health profession­als often get referrals from the legal system to evaluate the mental health and the capacity of a child to determine culpabilit­y.

We commonly find developmen­tal and environmen­tal vulnerabil­ities in such children. Poverty, poor monitoring by parents, life-skills deficits, school dropout, parental mental illness, and deviant older peer

group frequently mpact these young lives. There appears to be a psychosoci­al causality to their alleged involvemen­t in a crime.

Children’s vulnerabil­ities tend to respond to love or fear from persons in a position of authority, and their developing selves may not lend them the conviction­s needed to keep out of nefarious engagement. From this developmen­tal vulnerabil­ity lens, how does one then ascribe culpabilit­y to a young person? If I fall because the floor is weak, my legs are not responsibl­e! Strengthen the floor or teach me to fly and I will not fall again!

■ According to a Campaign Against Child Labour (CAC 2015) study, India has 1,26,66,377 child labourers. Two out of three children in India are anaemic. Two out of every three children are physically abused and 53.22 per cent children are reported to have faced one or more forms of sexual abuse but most of them did not report the matter to anyone. Almost all the children are facing emotional or verbal abuses in the country. (Study on child abuse India 2007;

MWCD of GoI) The majority of youth experience abuse while confined and show structural brain changes similar to individual­s who have experience­d lifetime trauma exposure.

— Natalia Orendain, neuroscien­ce researcher

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