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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 May 2025
Canada has a long and deep tradition of citizen participation in welfare services of all kinds. This is not confined to the level of religious charity, nor to developmental stages, but continues in the operation of professional services by our most sophisticated agencies.
(1) Canadian Corrections Association. Correctional Process, Vol. VI, n° 4, January 1961.
(2) Canadian Welfare Council. Early Detection of Delinquency and Disturbance, 1957.
(3) Rév. Frère Jacques. « Le rôle social du chef de police dans la prévention de la délinquance juvénile». La Revue Canadienne de Criminologie, Vol. 1, n° 1, octobre 1958.
(4) Canada. Department of National Health and Welfare. Mental Health Division. Residential Treatment Services for Emotionally Disturbed Children in Canada. Ottawa : 1960.
(5) Canadian Corrections Association Correctional Process, Vol. IV, n° 5, September 1957.
(6) Egan, Maurice. « Changing Concept in Working with the Pre-Delinquent ». Canadian Journal of Corrections, Vol. 3, n° 3, July 1961.