I. Introduction II. Historic Rationales for the Juvenile Court ... A. Juveniles Are Not Responsible ... 1. The Legal Framework ... 2. The Psychological Evidence ... a. Changing Views of Children\u27s Competence ... b. The Low Expectations of the Criminal Law ... c. The Lack of Congruence between Competence and Responsibility ... d. Some Preliminary Conclusions ... B. Juveniles Are Especially Amenable to Treatment ... C. Formal, Adversary Procedures Are Not Conducive to Rehabilitation ... D. Summary: A Bankrupt Legal Theory III. Why Due Process Requires a New Juvenile Court ... A. The Developmental Psychology of Procedure ... 1. The Salience of Freedom ... 2. The Social Psychology of Procedural Justice ... 3. Developmental Factors in Use of ...
Recent years have witnessed a mounting crescendo of concern over the administration of our juvenile ...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social WorkW. Richard GoeAt each mile...
This Article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Gault...
An inability to reconcile society\u27s need for protection from juvenile crime with the use of nonpu...
The author\u27s study, reported in this comment, had two objectives. First, it attempted to determin...
For over sixty years, courts consistently found notions of due process inapplicable in juvenile proc...
For decades, the juvenile court has struggled to contain two contradictory, but necessary theories o...
This article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court’s decision in Gault, t...
The origins of Juvenile courts are traced to the chancery, established and erected in England in the...
Legal disputes involving children invariably evoke a complex matrix of issues such as child and adol...
juvenile court systems across the United States, the philosophy of juvenile justice has reflected so...
Part I briefly analyzes the social history of the juvenile court and argues that the progressive ref...
In the typical juvenile delinquency case, a child is arrested by a policeman for the alleged commiss...
Progressive reformers envisioned a therapeutic juvenile court that made individualized treatment dec...
Recent years have witnessed a mounting crescendo of concern over the administration of our juvenile ...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social WorkW. Richard GoeAt each mile...
This Article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Gault...
An inability to reconcile society\u27s need for protection from juvenile crime with the use of nonpu...
The author\u27s study, reported in this comment, had two objectives. First, it attempted to determin...
For over sixty years, courts consistently found notions of due process inapplicable in juvenile proc...
For decades, the juvenile court has struggled to contain two contradictory, but necessary theories o...
This article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court’s decision in Gault, t...
The origins of Juvenile courts are traced to the chancery, established and erected in England in the...
Legal disputes involving children invariably evoke a complex matrix of issues such as child and adol...
juvenile court systems across the United States, the philosophy of juvenile justice has reflected so...
Part I briefly analyzes the social history of the juvenile court and argues that the progressive ref...
In the typical juvenile delinquency case, a child is arrested by a policeman for the alleged commiss...
Progressive reformers envisioned a therapeutic juvenile court that made individualized treatment dec...
Recent years have witnessed a mounting crescendo of concern over the administration of our juvenile ...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social WorkW. Richard GoeAt each mile...