There is a trend that has swept across America\u27s juvenile justice system, and that is to send children as young as fourteen years old into some of the most violent and oppressive adult prisons in the nation. When children are housed with adult criminals, the result is a process that does not rehabilitate children; rather it only seeks to further their criminality. Children have not always been treated this way, so we must ask the question: How did we get to this point in the justice system? When did we stop viewing children as children, and begin to fear them as hardened criminals? The idea of childhood as a developmental stage has not always been an accepted fact. In the Middle Ages infancy ended at age seven, and adulthood began. At ...
In today’s society, as soon as a child turns eighteen, they are legally considered adults and no lon...
This study examines two juvenile justice reform efforts in one state. The first initiative, a detent...
juvenile court systems across the United States, the philosophy of juvenile justice has reflected so...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
An inability to reconcile society\u27s need for protection from juvenile crime with the use of nonpu...
Although juvenile crime rates have been decreasing rapidly in the last three decades, 2,805 children...
Twenty-first century juvenile justice jurisprudence has focused on the criminal responsibility of ad...
There is a general consensus that when children are accused of committing criminal offenses, the mai...
This article presents a historical overview of how legally and socially constructed definitions of c...
This Note surveys the history of the juvenile justice system, including the philosophy behind its fo...
This is essentially a study of social control processes as they relate to juveniles. It takes the fo...
Citation: Schild, Clara Dorothy and Hezig, Pauline E. Modern methods of reforming delinquent youths....
A century ago, Progressive reformers adopted a more modem construction of childhood as a development...
This Comment provides an historical analysis of the principles, understandings and laws that have fo...
The juvenile justice system was founded on the beliefs that youth were inherently different from adu...
In today’s society, as soon as a child turns eighteen, they are legally considered adults and no lon...
This study examines two juvenile justice reform efforts in one state. The first initiative, a detent...
juvenile court systems across the United States, the philosophy of juvenile justice has reflected so...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
An inability to reconcile society\u27s need for protection from juvenile crime with the use of nonpu...
Although juvenile crime rates have been decreasing rapidly in the last three decades, 2,805 children...
Twenty-first century juvenile justice jurisprudence has focused on the criminal responsibility of ad...
There is a general consensus that when children are accused of committing criminal offenses, the mai...
This article presents a historical overview of how legally and socially constructed definitions of c...
This Note surveys the history of the juvenile justice system, including the philosophy behind its fo...
This is essentially a study of social control processes as they relate to juveniles. It takes the fo...
Citation: Schild, Clara Dorothy and Hezig, Pauline E. Modern methods of reforming delinquent youths....
A century ago, Progressive reformers adopted a more modem construction of childhood as a development...
This Comment provides an historical analysis of the principles, understandings and laws that have fo...
The juvenile justice system was founded on the beliefs that youth were inherently different from adu...
In today’s society, as soon as a child turns eighteen, they are legally considered adults and no lon...
This study examines two juvenile justice reform efforts in one state. The first initiative, a detent...
juvenile court systems across the United States, the philosophy of juvenile justice has reflected so...