When the child and the state confront each other in the juvenile justice system, no amount of benevolent intentions, studied informality, or euphemistic terminology should be allowed to obscure the fact that they are, in fact, adversaries. What is at stake in juvenile delinquency proceedings is the child\u27s right to liberty and his right to continue in the custody of his parents against the state\u27s power to control crime and enforce morality. Despite this fact, the juvenile justice system created by legislation in virtually every state was empowered to disregard customary procedures for protecting the accused from the power of the state. It was allowed to employ instead a non-adversary, rehabilitative, parental approach in treating c...
In Part I, this Article analyzes the criminalization of juvenile delinquency. The juvenile justice...
During the last decade and a half, there has been significant recognition of the legal rights of chi...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
When the child and the state confront each other in the juvenile justice system, no amount of benevo...
As the juvenile justice system evolves into a more punitive system, due process protections are esse...
When someone wrongs another, a yearning for redress, punishment or retribution naturally springs fro...
The traditional juvenile court, focused on rehabilitation and "childsaving," was premised primarily ...
An inability to reconcile society\u27s need for protection from juvenile crime with the use of nonpu...
Recent years have witnessed a mounting crescendo of concern over the administration of our juvenile ...
There are no delinquent children; there are only delinquent parents. This tautological truism has l...
When someone wrongs another, a yearning for redress, punishment or retribution naturally springs fro...
To argue that the adjudicated child is not punished as the adult offender but is provided care, pr...
A little over a century after the creation of the first juvenile court in America, the states and th...
Twenty-first century juvenile justice jurisprudence has focused on the criminal responsibility of ad...
juvenile court systems across the United States, the philosophy of juvenile justice has reflected so...
In Part I, this Article analyzes the criminalization of juvenile delinquency. The juvenile justice...
During the last decade and a half, there has been significant recognition of the legal rights of chi...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
When the child and the state confront each other in the juvenile justice system, no amount of benevo...
As the juvenile justice system evolves into a more punitive system, due process protections are esse...
When someone wrongs another, a yearning for redress, punishment or retribution naturally springs fro...
The traditional juvenile court, focused on rehabilitation and "childsaving," was premised primarily ...
An inability to reconcile society\u27s need for protection from juvenile crime with the use of nonpu...
Recent years have witnessed a mounting crescendo of concern over the administration of our juvenile ...
There are no delinquent children; there are only delinquent parents. This tautological truism has l...
When someone wrongs another, a yearning for redress, punishment or retribution naturally springs fro...
To argue that the adjudicated child is not punished as the adult offender but is provided care, pr...
A little over a century after the creation of the first juvenile court in America, the states and th...
Twenty-first century juvenile justice jurisprudence has focused on the criminal responsibility of ad...
juvenile court systems across the United States, the philosophy of juvenile justice has reflected so...
In Part I, this Article analyzes the criminalization of juvenile delinquency. The juvenile justice...
During the last decade and a half, there has been significant recognition of the legal rights of chi...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...