Introducing the Issue

4区 法学 Q1 Social Sciences Future of Children Pub Date : 2008-09-22 DOI:10.1353/FOC.0.0010
L. Steinberg
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

American juvenile justice policy is in a period of transition. After a decade of declining juvenile crime rates, the moral panic that fueled the "get-tough" reforms of the 1990s and early 2000s--reforms that eroded the boundaries between juvenile and criminal court and exposed juvenile offenders to increasingly harsh punishments--has waned. State legislatures across the country have reconsidered punitive statutes they enacted with enthusiasm not so many years ago. What we may be seeing now is a pendulum that has reached its apex and is slowly beginning to swing back toward more moderate policies, as politicians and the public come to regret the high economic costs and ineffectiveness of the punitive reforms and the harshness of the sanctions. Several concrete indicators of this shift are noteworthy. First, in the wake of the Supreme Court's 2005 Roper v. Simmons opinion abolishing the juvenile death penalty, several state legislatures have repealed, or are considering repealing, statutes imposing sentences of life without parole on juvenile murderers. (1) Other states have scaled back, often in response to mounting economic costs, automatic transfer laws that send youth to the adult criminal system by statutory exclusion. (2) Many states have increased funding for community-based treatment programs as alternatives to institutional placement. (3) In a few states where youth under eighteen are prosecuted in adult criminal court instead of juvenile court, promising efforts are under way to increase the age to eighteen, as it is in most states. (4) Finally, several states have expanded procedural protection for juveniles in criminal court by enacting statutory provisions authorizing findings of incompetence to stand trial on the basis of developmental immaturity. (5) Although many of the punitive reforms of the 1990s still remain in place, a policy shift appears to have taken place. Several developments have converged to change the direction of the nation's youth crime policy. Among the most important was the steady decline in juvenile crime beginning in 1994. In the same way that the upward trend in juvenile violence during the 1980s set the stage for the spate of punitive legislation during the 1990s, this downward trend has opened the door to discussions about returning to more moderate policies. Advocates for reform also have been successful in focusing media and political attention on a broad range of emerging social science evidence about adolescent development and juvenile crime. Editorials and op-eds in local and national newspapers have pointed to this evidence in arguing that adolescents lack the emotional and mental maturity of adults, that juvenile offenders should be given a second chance, that the public supports rehabilitative efforts, and, perhaps most important, that trying juveniles as adults is simply not cost-effective. Evidence of the high economic cost to the government of the wholesale incarceration of juveniles with adults--together with studies finding that adolescents released from adult correctional facilities are more likely to re-offend than those sentenced to juvenile facilities--have influenced the public debate. (6) Those who applaud the trend toward justice policies that recognize the differences between adolescents and adults may be heartened by these developments, but they should not naively assume that this trend will proceed unabated. Juvenile crime rates, which have risen and fallen cyclically for four decades, will likely rise again, though perhaps not to the extremes of the early 1990s. Indeed, although rates continue to be low, they have crept up recently; in the past year or two, violent crime by juveniles has edged above the 2004 rates, which were the lowest in nearly two decades. (7) It is too early to tell whether recent reports of an uptick in juvenile crime indicate a reversal of the downward trend that the United States enjoyed for well over a decade, or, instead, a transient fluctuation. …
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问题介绍
美国少年司法政策正处于转型期。在经历了青少年犯罪率下降的十年之后,道德恐慌已经消退,这种恐慌曾推动了20世纪90年代和21世纪初的“强硬”改革——这些改革侵蚀了少年法庭和刑事法庭之间的界限,使少年犯受到越来越严厉的惩罚。全国各地的州立法机构都在重新考虑他们几年前热情制定的惩罚性法规。我们现在可能看到的是一个钟摆已经达到顶点,并开始慢慢地向更温和的政策倾斜,因为政治家和公众开始对惩罚性改革的高经济成本和无效以及严厉的制裁感到遗憾。这一转变的几个具体指标值得注意。首先,在2005年最高法院Roper诉Simmons案废除青少年死刑之后,几个州的立法机构已经或正在考虑废除对青少年杀人犯判处终身监禁不得假释的法规。其他州通常是为了应对不断上升的经济成本,已经缩减了通过法定排除将青少年送入成人犯罪系统的自动转移法。(2)许多州增加了对社区治疗项目的资助,作为机构安置的替代方案。(3)在一些州,未满18岁的青少年在成人刑事法庭而不是少年法庭被起诉,正在进行有希望的努力,将法定年龄提高到18岁,就像在大多数州一样。(4)最后,一些州已经扩大了对刑事法庭未成年人的程序保护,它们颁布了法定条款,授权在发育不成熟的基础上发现不称职的人接受审判。尽管20世纪90年代的许多惩罚性改革仍然存在,但政策似乎已经发生了转变。几项事态发展汇集在一起,改变了美国青少年犯罪政策的方向。其中最重要的是,从1994年开始,青少年犯罪率稳步下降。就像80年代青少年暴力的上升趋势为90年代大量的惩罚性立法奠定了基础一样,这种下降趋势也为讨论回归更温和的政策打开了大门。倡导改革的人还成功地将媒体和政治注意力集中在有关青少年发展和青少年犯罪的广泛的社会科学证据上。地方和全国性报纸的社论和专栏都指出了这一证据,认为青少年缺乏成年人的情感和精神成熟,应该给少年犯第二次机会,公众支持改造努力,也许最重要的是,把青少年当作成年人来审判根本不划算。有证据表明,将青少年与成年人一起大规模监禁给政府带来了高昂的经济成本,同时有研究发现,从成人教养设施释放出来的青少年比被判入狱的青少年更有可能再次犯罪。这些证据影响了公众的辩论。(6)那些赞同承认青少年和成年人之间差异的司法政策趋势的人可能会受到这些发展的鼓舞,但他们不应天真地认为这种趋势会有增无减。40年来,青少年犯罪率周期性地上升和下降,很可能再次上升,尽管可能不会达到20世纪90年代初的极端水平。事实上,尽管利率仍然很低,但最近已经悄悄上升;在过去的一两年里,青少年的暴力犯罪率已经略高于2004年,这是近二十年来的最低水平。(7)现在判断最近关于青少年犯罪率上升的报告是否表明美国十多年来犯罪率下降的趋势发生了逆转,还是只是暂时的波动,还为时过早。…
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Future of Children
Future of Children Multiple-
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期刊介绍: The Future of Children is a collaboration of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and the Brookings Institution. The mission of The Future of Children is to translate the best social science research about children and youth into information that is useful to policymakers, practitioners, grant-makers, advocates, the media, and students of public policy. The project publishes two journals and policy briefs each year, and provides various short summaries of our work. Topics range widely -- from income policy to family issues to education and health – with children’s policy as the unifying element. The senior editorial team is diverse, representing two institutions and multiple disciplines.
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