This article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court’s decision in Gault, that procedures in juvenile delinquency court should mimic the adult criminal process. The legal basis for this challenge is Gault itself, as well as the other Supreme Court cases that triggered the juvenile justice revolution of the past decades, for all of these cases relied on the due process clause, not the provisions of the Constitution that form the foundation for adult criminal procedure. That means that the central goal in juvenile justice is fundamental fairness, which does not have to be congruent with the adversarial tradition of adult criminal court. Instead, as the Court’s administrative procedure cases illustrate, fundamental ...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
I. Introduction II. Leading Supreme Court Cases Defining Procedural Due Process Rights of Juveniles ...
Criminologists argue whether the U.S. justice system operates from a model of due process or crime c...
This Article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Gault...
For over sixty years, courts consistently found notions of due process inapplicable in juvenile proc...
Kent v. United States required trial courts to conduct an individualized assessment before transferr...
The 1967 United States Supreme Court decision In re Gault 1 precipitated a procedural revolution tha...
The United States Supreme Court\u27s decision In re Gault 1 transformed the juvenile court into a ve...
The author\u27s study, reported in this comment, had two objectives. First, it attempted to determin...
I. Introduction II. Historic Rationales for the Juvenile Court ... A. Juveniles Are Not Responsible ...
The thesis of this paper can be stated simply: to the extent that courts permit procedural (or subst...
The object of this Article is to show that there is no inherent inconsistency between the juvenile c...
Today\u27s juvenile courtroom functions quite differently than did its 1899 Chicago ancestor. During...
There is a general consensus that when children are accused of committing criminal offenses, the mai...
The question of how to deal fairly and effectively with the problem of juvenile crime has long perpl...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
I. Introduction II. Leading Supreme Court Cases Defining Procedural Due Process Rights of Juveniles ...
Criminologists argue whether the U.S. justice system operates from a model of due process or crime c...
This Article challenges the accepted wisdom, at least since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Gault...
For over sixty years, courts consistently found notions of due process inapplicable in juvenile proc...
Kent v. United States required trial courts to conduct an individualized assessment before transferr...
The 1967 United States Supreme Court decision In re Gault 1 precipitated a procedural revolution tha...
The United States Supreme Court\u27s decision In re Gault 1 transformed the juvenile court into a ve...
The author\u27s study, reported in this comment, had two objectives. First, it attempted to determin...
I. Introduction II. Historic Rationales for the Juvenile Court ... A. Juveniles Are Not Responsible ...
The thesis of this paper can be stated simply: to the extent that courts permit procedural (or subst...
The object of this Article is to show that there is no inherent inconsistency between the juvenile c...
Today\u27s juvenile courtroom functions quite differently than did its 1899 Chicago ancestor. During...
There is a general consensus that when children are accused of committing criminal offenses, the mai...
The question of how to deal fairly and effectively with the problem of juvenile crime has long perpl...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
I. Introduction II. Leading Supreme Court Cases Defining Procedural Due Process Rights of Juveniles ...
Criminologists argue whether the U.S. justice system operates from a model of due process or crime c...