Juvenile Crime and Criminal Justice: Resolving Border Disputes

4区 法学 Q1 Social Sciences Future of Children Pub Date : 2008-06-19 DOI:10.2139/ssrn.1154670
J. Fagan
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引用次数: 64

Abstract

Rising juvenile crime rates during the 1970s and 1980s spurred state legislatures across the country to exclude or transfer a significant share of offenders under the age of eighteen to the jurisdiction of the criminal court, essentially redrawing the boundary between the juvenile and adult justice systems. Jeffrey Fagan examines the legal architecture of the new boundary-drawing regime and how effective it has been in reducing crime.The juvenile court, Fagan emphasizes, has always had the power to transfer juveniles to the criminal court. Transfer decisions were made individually by judges who weighed the competing interests of public safety and the possibility of rehabilitating young offenders. This authority has now been usurped by legislators and prosecutors. The recent changes in state law have moved large numbers of juveniles into the adult system. As many as 25 percent of all juvenile offenders younger than eighteen, says Fagan, are now prosecuted in adult court. Many live in states where the age boundary between juvenile and criminal court has been lowered to sixteen or seventeen.The key policy question is: do these new transfer laws reduce crime? In examining the research evidence, Fagan finds that rates of juvenile offending are not lower in states where it is relatively more common to try adolescents as adults. Likewise, juveniles who have been tried as adults are no less likely to re-offend than their counterparts who have been tried as juveniles. Treating juveniles as adult criminals, Fagan concludes, is not effective as a means of crime control.Fagan argues that the proliferation of transfer regimes over the past several decades calls into question the very rationale for a juvenile court. Transferring adolescent offenders to the criminal court exposes them to harsh and sometimes toxic forms of punishment that have the perverse effect of increasing criminal activity. The accumulating evidence on transfer, the recent decrease in serious juvenile crime, and new gains in the science of adolescent development, concludes Fagan, may be persuading legislators, policymakers, and practitioners that eighteen may yet again be the appropriate age for juvenile court jurisdiction.
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青少年犯罪与刑事司法:解决边界争端
在20世纪70年代和80年代,不断上升的青少年犯罪率促使全国各地的州立法机构将很大一部分未满18岁的罪犯排除在外,或将其移交给刑事法院管辖,实质上重新划定了青少年和成人司法系统之间的界限。杰弗里·费根研究了新的边界划定制度的法律架构,以及它在减少犯罪方面的效果。费根强调,少年法庭一直有权将青少年移交刑事法庭。法官在权衡了公共安全的相互冲突的利益和让年轻罪犯改过自新的可能性后,单独作出了移交决定。这一权力现在已被立法者和检察官篡夺。最近州法律的变化使大量的青少年进入成人系统。费根说,在所有18岁以下的少年犯中,有多达25%的人现在在成人法庭被起诉。许多人生活在青少年和刑事法庭之间的年龄界限已经降低到16岁或17岁的州。关键的政策问题是:这些新的转移法能减少犯罪吗?在检查研究证据时,费根发现,在把青少年当作成年人来审判的州,青少年犯罪的比率并不低。同样,作为成年人受审的青少年再次犯罪的可能性并不比作为青少年受审的同龄人低。费根总结说,把青少年当作成年罪犯来对待,作为一种控制犯罪的手段是无效的。费根认为,在过去的几十年里,移交制度的激增使人们对设立少年法庭的基本原理产生了质疑。将青少年罪犯移送刑事法庭会使他们受到严厉的,有时甚至是有害的惩罚,这种惩罚会增加犯罪活动。Fagan总结道,越来越多的关于转移的证据,最近严重青少年犯罪的减少,青少年发展科学的新进展,可能正在说服立法者,决策者和从业者,18岁可能再次成为少年法庭管辖权的合适年龄。
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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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