

An edition of Recriminalizing Delinquency (1996)
violent juvenile crime and juvenile justice reform
By Simon I. Singer
Publish Date
1996
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
eng
Pages
238
Description:
Recriminalizing Delinquency provides a detailed account of one state's attempt to control violent juvenile crime by redefining previous acts of delinquency as crimes, and delinquents as juvenile offenders. It begins with the brutal violence of a 15-year-old chronic delinquent, and the subsequent passage of waiver legislation which abruptly lowered the age of criminal responsibility for juveniles charged with violent offenses. But the reasons for bringing juveniles into criminal court, Singer argues, go beyond sensational acts of violence and the immediate concerns of elected officials to do something about violent juvenile crime. Instead, recriminalization is seen as a product of earlier juvenile justice reforms and modern-day political and organizational interests in classifying juveniles with a diverse set of legal categories. Singer shows that waiver legislation has not eliminated the need for juvenile justice nor has it reduced the incidence of violent juvenile crime.
subjects: Administration of Criminal justice, Administration of Juvenile justice, Criminal justice, Administration of, Juvenile delinquency, Juvenile delinquents, Juvenile justice, Administration of, Law reform, Prevention, Violent crimes, Rechtshervorming, Reforme, Administration, Justice penale, Jeugdcriminaliteit, Jugendstrafrecht, Crimes violents, Jugendkriminalitat, Jeunes delinquants, Justice pour mineurs, Delinquance juvenile, Reform, Droit, Strafrechtspleging, Legal status, laws
Places: New York (State)