1 / 11

Juvenile Justice Chapter 9

Juvenile Justice Chapter 9. The Juvenile Court and Alternatives at Intake. Juvenile Court. Has jurisdiction over minors Basically a Civil System Underlying philosophy is Parens Patriae Offers juveniles individualized treatment rather than punishment. Juvenile Court. Purpose Statements

kirkan
Télécharger la présentation

Juvenile Justice Chapter 9

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Juvenile Justice Chapter 9 The Juvenile Court and Alternatives at Intake

  2. Juvenile Court • Has jurisdiction over minors • Basically a Civil System • Underlying philosophy is Parens Patriae • Offers juveniles individualized treatment rather than punishment

  3. Juvenile Court • Purpose Statements • Balanced and Restorative justice • Advocates that juvenile courts give balanced attention to Public Safety, individual accountability to victims and the community, development in offenders of the skills necessary to live a low-abiding and productive life. • Stand Juvenile Court Act Clauses (1925) • Care, guidance and control that will be conducive to his welfare and the best interest of the state

  4. Juvenile Court • Purpose Statements (continued) • Legislative Clauses • To provide for the care, protection and wholesome mental and physical development of children • To remove children committing delinquent the consequences of criminal behavior and toi substitute a program of supervision, care and rehabilitation • To remove a child from the home “only when necessary for his welfare or in the interests of society

  5. Juvenile Court • Purpose Statements (continued) • Clauses emphasizing punishment, deterrence, accountability and/or public safety • Stresses community protection, offender accountability, crime reduction through deterrence or punishment • Clauses with Traditional Child Welfare Emphasis • Treat not as criminals, but as children needing aid, encouragement or guidance • Justice Model vs the Welfare model • Paren Patriae “best interest of the child” • Justice model: youth held accountable and punished

  6. Juvenile Court Jurisdiction • Types of cases heard in JC • Those who are neglected, ldependant or abused due to guardians • Those who are incorrigible, ungovernable or staus offenders • Those who violate laws, ordinances and codes classified as penal or criminal • Criticisms of JC • “One-pot” jurisdictional approach

  7. Juvenile Court Jurisdiction • Determined by offenders age and conduct • See page 297 • No specific age for Hawaii (discretion by court • Youths who violate Federal laws are considered delinquent and subject to JC • Other Cases • Adoptions, paternity and guadianship • State is the “higher parent” of all children within its borders • Wardship: abused or neglected or committed a status or criminal act

  8. Juvenile Court Jurisdiction • Excluded from juvenile court • Concurrent jurisdiction • JC and CC UCR Part I offenses • Venue: usually takes place where the youth lives • Types of Juvenile Court (3 types) • Independent and separate • Other judges preside over courts (CT, UT, RI) • Part of Family Court • Trial Court • M • o

  9. Juvenile Court Characteristics • Separate hearings for children’s cases • Informal • Regular probation • Separate detention • Special court and probation records • Provisions for mental & physical examinations • Acts on behalf of neglected and abused children • May be criminal or non-criminal

  10. Juvenile Court Characteristics • Coercive intervention: • Out of home placement, detainment or mandated therapy or counseling • Therapeutic Intervention: recommends treatment • Child exhibiting violent behavior or sexually abused • Treatment for children is long-term • Corporal punishment doesn't work • Early intervention

  11. Juvenile Court Overview • Juveniles typically enter JC through contact with police • Delinquent can be detained • Licensed foster home • Facility operated by CWS • Detention Home under direction of JC or public authority • Other facility designated by JC • Intake • Conducted by intake officer who can: • Make recommendations to JC • Release with lecture • Recommend Prosecution • Recommend dismissal, transfer to adult court, diversion or referral for adjudication

More Related