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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
( 5 pp) Sentencing youth to incarceration can never
be the sole solution to delinquency and crime.
However, public fears about juvenile delinquency
and crime have escalated in recent years, boosted
in part by a handful of headline-grabbing incidents
that foster stereotypes of young people as out of
control. It is not as though these incidents do
not happen, sadly they do. However, the doubt
which it engenders in society's mind concerning
its youth is equally damaging. One proposed
solution is to sentence and incarcerate juveniles
as adults. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBjvsenA.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
part by a handful of headline-grabbing incidents that foster stereotypes of young people as out of control. It is not as though these incidents do not happen, sadly they
do. However, the doubt which it engenders in societys mind concerning its youth is equally damaging. One proposed solution is to sentence and incarcerate juveniles as adults.
History Several observations or themes can be generalized from the research and analysis done by National Criminal Justice Association staff concerning
the initiation, formulation, and implementation of historic juvenile justice legislation within the United States. The most visible legislative impetus is the perception of juvenile offenders as acting ruthlessly and without
remorse. The resulting fear and anger over violent juvenile crime has caused a shift of the overall purpose of many juvenile codes and juvenile courts to one focusing on the
accountability and punishment of young offenders. This emphasis replaces or complements the former, more rehabilitative approach to juvenile justice policy common to most States laws since the inception of a
separate system of juvenile justice nearly 100 years ago (http://www.ojjdp.ncjrs.org/pubs/reform/ch4.html). Abolish the juvenile court Within the past three decades, judicial decisions, legislative amendments,
and administrative changes have transformed the juvenile court from an initial rehabilitative social welfare agency into a scaled-down, second-class criminal court or young people (Feld 68). These reforms have
converted the historical ideal of the juvenile court as a social welfare institution into a penal system that provides young offenders with neither therapy nor justice. The actions and
procedures which convergence between juvenile and criminal courts eliminates virtually all of the original and operational differences in strategies of criminal social control for youths and adults. No compelling reasons
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