In the typical juvenile delinquency case, a child is arrested by a policeman for the alleged commission of a criminal act; taken to a police station where he is interrogated by the arresting officer and others who attempt to extract a confession from him; brought before a judge; accused of committing a crime; prosecuted, and, if found guilty, sentenced to prison or probation. Labeling such a process civil rather than criminal, and asserting that its purpose is the rehabilitation rather than the punishment, deterrence and incapacitation of offenders, does not alter the reality of what happens to the child. A finding is a verdict, involved means guilty, an act which if done by an adult would be a crime is a crime, a disposition is...
This article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Gault...
The juvenile justice system is beset by major societal forces and does not lack for critics. Several...
When the child and the state confront each other in the juvenile justice system, no amount of benevo...
In the typical juvenile delinquency case, a child is arrested by a policeman for the alleged commiss...
The author\u27s study, reported in this comment, had two objectives. First, it attempted to determin...
There is a general consensus that when children are accused of committing criminal offenses, the mai...
The thesis of this paper can be stated simply: to the extent that courts permit procedural (or subst...
An inability to reconcile society\u27s need for protection from juvenile crime with the use of nonpu...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Throughout much of its history, the American juvenile court maintained a goal of rehabilitation of t...
To argue that the adjudicated child is not punished as the adult offender but is provided care, pr...
In handing down its decision in In Re Gault, the Supreme Court extended to youths accused of delinq...
I. Introduction II. Historic Rationales for the Juvenile Court ... A. Juveniles Are Not Responsible ...
In re Gault was the Supreme Court\u27s initial foray into what Mr. Justice Fortas called a peculiar...
For over sixty years, courts consistently found notions of due process inapplicable in juvenile proc...
This article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Gault...
The juvenile justice system is beset by major societal forces and does not lack for critics. Several...
When the child and the state confront each other in the juvenile justice system, no amount of benevo...
In the typical juvenile delinquency case, a child is arrested by a policeman for the alleged commiss...
The author\u27s study, reported in this comment, had two objectives. First, it attempted to determin...
There is a general consensus that when children are accused of committing criminal offenses, the mai...
The thesis of this paper can be stated simply: to the extent that courts permit procedural (or subst...
An inability to reconcile society\u27s need for protection from juvenile crime with the use of nonpu...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Throughout much of its history, the American juvenile court maintained a goal of rehabilitation of t...
To argue that the adjudicated child is not punished as the adult offender but is provided care, pr...
In handing down its decision in In Re Gault, the Supreme Court extended to youths accused of delinq...
I. Introduction II. Historic Rationales for the Juvenile Court ... A. Juveniles Are Not Responsible ...
In re Gault was the Supreme Court\u27s initial foray into what Mr. Justice Fortas called a peculiar...
For over sixty years, courts consistently found notions of due process inapplicable in juvenile proc...
This article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Gault...
The juvenile justice system is beset by major societal forces and does not lack for critics. Several...
When the child and the state confront each other in the juvenile justice system, no amount of benevo...