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Transformation of Juvenile Justice Philosophy and Practice

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Title: Transformation of Juvenile Justice Philosophy and Practice


1
Transformation of Juvenile Justice Philosophy and
Practice
  • Presented by Jim Burfeind, Ph.D.
  • Professor and Chair, Department of Sociology
  • Criminology Program
  • The University of Montana

2
The Social and Legal Concept of Juvenile
Delinquency
  • Three historical developments that led to the
    concept of juvenile delinquency
  • The discovery of childhood and adolescence as
    developmental stages in the life cycle during the
    Enlightenment Period (1600s late 1700s).
  • The development of parens patriae as a legal
    concept in English Equity Law, beginning in the
    14th century (1300s).
  • The emergence of positivist criminology in the
    late 1800s.

3
The Social and Legal Concept of Juvenile
Delinquency
  • As a result of these historical developments
  • Adolescence began to be viewed as a distinct and
    crucial developmental stage an age of
    dependency and risk. Juvenile delinquency is
    seen as a manifestation of problematic adolescent
    development.
  • The scientific method was used to identify key
    causes of delinquent behavior, allowing for
    prevention, assessment, and reform.
  • While the family was viewed as centrally
    important, the state has a vested interest in the
    welfare of children and must assume parental
    authority if the parents are unable or unwilling
    to handle their parental duties and
    responsibilities.

4
The Invention of the Juvenile Court
  • The creation of the first juvenile court in
    Chicago in 1899 was a culmination of a series of
    changes throughout the 1800s, but most
    significantly the child-saving movement of the
    late 1800s.
  • An Act to Regulate the Treatment and Control of
    Dependent, Neglected, and Delinquent Children
    (1899).
  • The new juvenile court established a separate
    legal system that is noteworthy in three primary
    ways
  • Separate structure and broad jurisdiction.
  • Legal authority under parens patriae.
  • Legal philosophy and process the rehabilitative
    ideal.

5
Separate Structure and Broad Jurisdiction
  • A separate court with its own personnel.
  • Broad jurisdiction The Illinois Juvenile Court
    Act (1899) specifically allocated the first
    juvenile court authority to deal with
  • Dependent and neglected youth
  • Status offenders
  • Delinquent youth

6
Legal Authority Parens Patriae
  • Robert Mennel observes that the creation of the
    juvenile court represented both a restatement and
    an expansion of the parens patriae doctrine.
  • Commonwealth v. Fisher (1905, Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court) To save a child from becoming a
    criminal, or from continuing in a career of
    crime, to end in maturer years in public
    punishment and disgrace, the legislatures surely
    may provide for the salvation of such a child, if
    its parents or guardians be unable or unwilling
    to do so, by bringing it into one of the courts
    of the state without any process at all, for the
    purpose of subjecting it to the states
    guardianship and protection.
  • The Illinois Juvenile Court Act provided a
    variety of dispositions of commitment for
    dependency neglect, status offenders, and
    delinquent youth.

7
Legal Philosophy and Process The Rehabilitative
Ideal
  • Diminished criminal responsibility.
  • A child welfare approach the child-savers
    envisioned the juvenile court as a welfare
    system, more than a judicial system.
  • Protect, nurture, discipline, and reform.
  • Casework involving rational, scientific
    assessment to determine an individualized
    treatment.
  • A focus on the offender, not the offense.
  • Informal, family-like procedures, promoting the
    rehabilitative ideal
  • An informal setting
  • Nonadversarial process civil, not criminal
  • Limited due process

8
The Second Revolution inJuvenile Justice
  • In the second revolution, significant change was
    imposed on the juvenile justice system through
    changes in law, both case law and statutory law.
  • The due process revolution in juvenile justice
    (roughly 1966 1975).
  • Enactment of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
    Prevention Act of 1974.
  • A get tough approach Initiatives for
    punishment and accountability, beginning in the
    1980s.

9
The Due Process Revolution in Juvenile Justice
  • Due process of law procedures of justice that
    are stipulated by law and applied through
    appellate court decisions. These procedures
    extend individual freedoms and limit governmental
    powers as established in constitutions.
  • Kent v. United States (1966)
  • in re Gault (1967)
  • in re Winship (1970)
  • McKeiver v. Pennsylvania (1971)
  • Breed v. Jones (1975)

10
The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
Act of 1974
  • Redefine juvenile delinquency as distinct from
    status offenses.
  • Diversion and deinstitutionalization of status
    offenders encourage use of community-based
    programs.
  • Reform the use of detention jail removal sight
    and sound separation and disproportionate
    minority confinement.
  • Delinquency prevention through the identification
    of cause-based risk factors and effective
    prevention programming.

11
Getting Tough Initiatives for Punishment and
Accountability
  • Transfer provisions judicial waiver concurrent
    jurisdiction and statutory exclusion.
  • Sentencing authority offense-based dispositions,
    retribution and deterrence replaced
    rehabilitation.
  • Confidentiality statutory law change allowing
    for the release of juvenile court records.
  • Balanced and restorative justice offender
    accountability, public safety, and offender
    competency development. Balanced Juvenile Justice
    and Crime Prevention Act (1996)

12
Juvenile Accountability Incentive Block Grants
Program (1997)
  • Serious violent juvenile offenders, age 15 years
    or over, must be criminally prosecuted in adult
    court
  • Graduated sanctions should be imposed for every
    delinquency act, including probation violations,
    and sanctions must escalate for each subsequent,
    more serious offense or probation violation
  • Records of juvenile felony offenders, who have a
    prior delinquency adjudication, are to be treated
    in a manner equivalent to adult records,
    including submission of such records to the FBI
    and
  • Parental responsibility state law must not
    prohibit juvenile court judges from issuing court
    orders that require parental supervision of
    juvenile offenders.

13
Montana Code Annotated 2007
  • 41-5-102. Declaration of purpose. The Montana
    Youth Court Act must be interpreted and construed
    to effectuate the following express legislative
    purposes (1) to preserve the unity and welfare
    of the family whenever possible and to provide
    for the care, protection, and wholesome mental
    and physical development of a youth coming within
    the provisions of the Montana Youth Court Act
    (2) to prevent and reduce youth delinquency
    through a system that does not seek retribution
    but that provides      (a) immediate,
    consistent, enforceable, and avoidable
    consequences of youths' actions      (b) a
    program of supervision, care, rehabilitation,
    detention, competency development, and community
    protection for youth before they become adult
    offenders and      (c) in appropriate cases,
    restitution as ordered by the youth court
  • (d) that, whenever removal from the home is
    necessary, the youth is entitled to maintain
    ethnic, cultural, religious heritage whenever
    appropriate(3) to achieve the purposes of
    subsections (1) and (2) in a family environment
    whenever possible, separating the youth from the
    parents only when necessary for the welfare of
    the youth or for the safety and protection of the
    community (4) to provide judicial procedures in
    which the parties are ensured a fair, accurate
    hearing and recognition and enforcement of their
    constitutional and statutory rights.
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