In Part II of this Comment, the history and operation of the Texas Juvenile PSGs will be explored. Part III will include an analysis of the FSGs to include a discussion of the strengths and weaknesses. The analysis of the FSGs will be applied to the Texas Juvenile System in Part IV. Finally, the argument will be made for the mandatory application of the Texas Juvenile PSGs
To argue that the adjudicated child is not punished as the adult offender but is provided care, pr...
Our American criminal justice system is too often described as broken. It was not a clean break in a...
The traditional juvenile court, focused on rehabilitation and childsaving, was premised primarily ...
In Part II of this Comment, the history and operation of the Texas Juvenile PSGs will be explored. P...
The adult criminal justice system is worse for juveniles who commit crimes. Underlying principles up...
The adult criminal justice system is worse for juveniles who commit crimes. Underlying principles up...
For the reasons explored in detail in this Comment, the Texas juvenile justice system should be refo...
In the words of Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan, children are different. The issue of how to sente...
The aim of this Comment is to create a legislative paradigm shift by viewing status offenders, parti...
This Article attempts to provide an analytical framework for identifying the punitive aspects of the...
This Note will argue that, despite the fact that adjudication as a status offender has the potential...
In an age where one in four adult Americans has a criminal record, post-conviction relief measures a...
For more than 120 years, juvenile justice law has not substantively defined the core questions in mo...
The federal government draws the boundary between childhood and adulthood at age 18 for activities s...
This Comment provides an historical analysis of the principles, understandings and laws that have fo...
To argue that the adjudicated child is not punished as the adult offender but is provided care, pr...
Our American criminal justice system is too often described as broken. It was not a clean break in a...
The traditional juvenile court, focused on rehabilitation and childsaving, was premised primarily ...
In Part II of this Comment, the history and operation of the Texas Juvenile PSGs will be explored. P...
The adult criminal justice system is worse for juveniles who commit crimes. Underlying principles up...
The adult criminal justice system is worse for juveniles who commit crimes. Underlying principles up...
For the reasons explored in detail in this Comment, the Texas juvenile justice system should be refo...
In the words of Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan, children are different. The issue of how to sente...
The aim of this Comment is to create a legislative paradigm shift by viewing status offenders, parti...
This Article attempts to provide an analytical framework for identifying the punitive aspects of the...
This Note will argue that, despite the fact that adjudication as a status offender has the potential...
In an age where one in four adult Americans has a criminal record, post-conviction relief measures a...
For more than 120 years, juvenile justice law has not substantively defined the core questions in mo...
The federal government draws the boundary between childhood and adulthood at age 18 for activities s...
This Comment provides an historical analysis of the principles, understandings and laws that have fo...
To argue that the adjudicated child is not punished as the adult offender but is provided care, pr...
Our American criminal justice system is too often described as broken. It was not a clean break in a...
The traditional juvenile court, focused on rehabilitation and childsaving, was premised primarily ...