The Common Thread: Diversion in the Jurisprudence of a Century of Juvenile Justice

Show simple item record

dc.coverage.spatial Estados Unidos
dc.date.accessioned 2016-01-07T15:29:11Z
dc.date.available 2016-01-07T15:29:11Z
dc.identifier.uri http://desa1.cejamericas.org:8080/handle/2015/3519
dc.description.abstract A central objective of those who created the juvenile court was to protect young delinquents from the destructive punishments of the criminal justice system.This promotion of juvenile court as a diversion from criminal justice is distinct from more ambitious programs of “child saving” intervention because avoiding harm can be achieved even if no efective crime prevention treatmentsare available. This essay shows diversion has been an important motive in juvenilejustice from the beginning, and the dominant purpose of a separate juvenilecourt since In Re Gault in 1967. The past thirty years have been the juvenilecourt’s finest hour as a diversion project; the rate of juvenile incarceration hasbeen stable, while incarceration of young adults has soared.
dc.title The Common Thread: Diversion in the Jurisprudence of a Century of Juvenile Justice
dc.ceja.source Fuente: <a href="http://repositories.cdlib.org/cilas/papers/22" target="_blank">eScholarship Repository, University of California.</a>


Files in this item

Thumbnail Files: eeuu-century-juvenile-justice.pdf
Size: 253.7Kb
Format: PDF

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record