Recent studies by the U.S. Department of Justice have found that, while adult violent crime rates continue to drop, today\u27s juvenile offenders are the fastest growing segment among violent criminals. The unprecedented increase in juvenile criminality is expected to result in a dramatic increase in the overall rate of violent crime as these juveniles approach majority. Funk argues that most states have not adapted to the troubling reality that the juvenile offenders of today are not the hubcap-stealing youths of days gone by, and that chronic adult criminality is predicated on violent and repeated acts of juvenile delinquency. These jurisdictions retain statutory provisions that allow for, or mandate, the expungement of juvenile crime rec...
The legal response to juvenile crime is undergoing revolutionary change, and its ultimate shape is u...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Elizabeth Scott and Laurence Steinberg explore the dramatic changes in the law’s conception of young...
Most state and federal statutes ‘‘expunge’ ’ (destroy or seal) a young offender’s record of juvenile...
This Article will attempt to survey the need for legislation allowing the expungement of an adjudica...
While it is easy to agree that there may well be a subset of delinquents whose records should be exp...
Many people believe that juvenile adjudications of delinquency are automatically expunged upon the y...
Contrary to the philosophy of the juvenile court, it is undoubtedly a rare occasion when a child ben...
Recognizing the near impossibility of changing societal views toward juvenile offenders, many legisl...
Both the federal and state governments have recognized that criminal adults and delinquent juveniles...
Twenty-first century juvenile justice jurisprudence has focused on the criminal responsibility of ad...
When a youngster makes a mistake and is arrested for committing a crime, should that act, committed ...
Presently, juvenile justice is widely acknowledged as being in a state of flux in the United States....
This Note surveys the history of the juvenile justice system, including the philosophy behind its fo...
This article traces the evolution of the youth justice system in Canada and the United States and ex...
The legal response to juvenile crime is undergoing revolutionary change, and its ultimate shape is u...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Elizabeth Scott and Laurence Steinberg explore the dramatic changes in the law’s conception of young...
Most state and federal statutes ‘‘expunge’ ’ (destroy or seal) a young offender’s record of juvenile...
This Article will attempt to survey the need for legislation allowing the expungement of an adjudica...
While it is easy to agree that there may well be a subset of delinquents whose records should be exp...
Many people believe that juvenile adjudications of delinquency are automatically expunged upon the y...
Contrary to the philosophy of the juvenile court, it is undoubtedly a rare occasion when a child ben...
Recognizing the near impossibility of changing societal views toward juvenile offenders, many legisl...
Both the federal and state governments have recognized that criminal adults and delinquent juveniles...
Twenty-first century juvenile justice jurisprudence has focused on the criminal responsibility of ad...
When a youngster makes a mistake and is arrested for committing a crime, should that act, committed ...
Presently, juvenile justice is widely acknowledged as being in a state of flux in the United States....
This Note surveys the history of the juvenile justice system, including the philosophy behind its fo...
This article traces the evolution of the youth justice system in Canada and the United States and ex...
The legal response to juvenile crime is undergoing revolutionary change, and its ultimate shape is u...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Elizabeth Scott and Laurence Steinberg explore the dramatic changes in the law’s conception of young...