This article examines the introduction of Referral Orders into the youth justice system in England and Wales. Placing the new Orders within the recent history of youth justice within this jurisdiction, it considers the experience of the eleven pilot areas in attempting to recruit and train the cohort of volunteers required to enable youth offender panels to operate. Using data from a Home Office-funded evaluation of the pilots it examines the first nine months of Referral Orders, the operation of Youth Offender Panels and the attitudes of sentencers towards the new disposal
Adverse peer pressure is a long-established contributing factor in the explanation for youth crime. ...
In a recent article in this journal, John Muncie (2002) argued that contemporary youth justice was i...
Referral orders are the standard sentence in England and Wales for children and young people pleadin...
Referral orders were introduced in 2002 as part of New Labour's first youth justice reforms, for you...
The Referral Order The Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999 introduces a new primary sent...
Referral orders are a relatively new and innovative form of restorative justice in the United Kingdo...
Referral orders are a relatively new and innovative form of restorative justice in the United Kingdo...
This thesis explores the recent introduction of restorative justice into the youth justice system in...
This article presents findings from in-depth, semi-structured interviews with young offenders and Vi...
This Guidance has been revised to take into account legislative changes provided for in the Criminal...
In recent years the government has introduced youth justice policy which claims to draw on the phi...
Responsibility is an increasingly important concept within both political and academic debates about...
Since the establishment of Youth Offending Teams (YOTs) in England and Wales in 1999, all victims of...
Though Northern Ireland is a relatively small jurisdiction within Ireland and the United Kingdom wit...
In the political or academic debate on juvenile justice, "responsibility" is an increasingly importa...
Adverse peer pressure is a long-established contributing factor in the explanation for youth crime. ...
In a recent article in this journal, John Muncie (2002) argued that contemporary youth justice was i...
Referral orders are the standard sentence in England and Wales for children and young people pleadin...
Referral orders were introduced in 2002 as part of New Labour's first youth justice reforms, for you...
The Referral Order The Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999 introduces a new primary sent...
Referral orders are a relatively new and innovative form of restorative justice in the United Kingdo...
Referral orders are a relatively new and innovative form of restorative justice in the United Kingdo...
This thesis explores the recent introduction of restorative justice into the youth justice system in...
This article presents findings from in-depth, semi-structured interviews with young offenders and Vi...
This Guidance has been revised to take into account legislative changes provided for in the Criminal...
In recent years the government has introduced youth justice policy which claims to draw on the phi...
Responsibility is an increasingly important concept within both political and academic debates about...
Since the establishment of Youth Offending Teams (YOTs) in England and Wales in 1999, all victims of...
Though Northern Ireland is a relatively small jurisdiction within Ireland and the United Kingdom wit...
In the political or academic debate on juvenile justice, "responsibility" is an increasingly importa...
Adverse peer pressure is a long-established contributing factor in the explanation for youth crime. ...
In a recent article in this journal, John Muncie (2002) argued that contemporary youth justice was i...
Referral orders are the standard sentence in England and Wales for children and young people pleadin...