Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the tension between government protestations that youth justice policy is evidence-led and what the evidence implies in the context of the age of criminal responsibility. Design/methodology/approach – The paper takes the form of a conceptual analysis of government policy and the evidence base. Findings – The paper concludes that the current low age of criminal responsibility in England and Wales can be understood as a manifestation of the influence of underclass theory on successive governments. Research limitations/implications – The paper is not based on primary research. Practical implications – The arguments adduced help to explain the reluctance of g...
The main aim of this article is to provoke a debate about the ways in which state responses to youth...
Under Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) , all child r...
This article explores how Australian jurisdictions came to have an approach to the age of criminal r...
In Scotland, the age of criminal responsibility is eight though children cannot be prosecuted until ...
In Scotland, the age of criminal responsibility is eight though children cannot be prosecuted until ...
The minimum age of criminal responsibility, as currently established within England and Wales, remai...
Currently in England and Wales the law considers that all children below 10 years of age are exempt ...
Currently in England and Wales the law considers that all children below 10 years of age are exempt ...
In England and Wales the age of criminal responsibility is set at 10 years. The current law therefor...
In Scotland, the age of criminal responsibility is eight though children cannot be prosecuted until ...
The question of the minimum age of criminal responsibility in England and Wales is one which regular...
The setting of an 'age of criminal responsibility' by States across the international spectrum is a ...
Throughout much of its history, juvenile justice in the Republic of Ireland has been oriented toward...
Youth justice under the Coalition government in England and Wales has been characterised by consider...
This article examines the age of criminal responsibility in law. It argues that the fair imputation ...
The main aim of this article is to provoke a debate about the ways in which state responses to youth...
Under Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) , all child r...
This article explores how Australian jurisdictions came to have an approach to the age of criminal r...
In Scotland, the age of criminal responsibility is eight though children cannot be prosecuted until ...
In Scotland, the age of criminal responsibility is eight though children cannot be prosecuted until ...
The minimum age of criminal responsibility, as currently established within England and Wales, remai...
Currently in England and Wales the law considers that all children below 10 years of age are exempt ...
Currently in England and Wales the law considers that all children below 10 years of age are exempt ...
In England and Wales the age of criminal responsibility is set at 10 years. The current law therefor...
In Scotland, the age of criminal responsibility is eight though children cannot be prosecuted until ...
The question of the minimum age of criminal responsibility in England and Wales is one which regular...
The setting of an 'age of criminal responsibility' by States across the international spectrum is a ...
Throughout much of its history, juvenile justice in the Republic of Ireland has been oriented toward...
Youth justice under the Coalition government in England and Wales has been characterised by consider...
This article examines the age of criminal responsibility in law. It argues that the fair imputation ...
The main aim of this article is to provoke a debate about the ways in which state responses to youth...
Under Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) , all child r...
This article explores how Australian jurisdictions came to have an approach to the age of criminal r...