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Over the last two decades, researchers have made significant discoveries about the causes and origins of delinquency. Specifically, we have learned a great deal about adolescent development and its relationship to decision-making, about multiple factors that contribute to delinquency, and about the processes and contexts associated with the course of delinquent careers. Over the same period, public officials have made sweeping jurisprudential, jurisdictional, and procedural changes in our juvenile justice systems. The Oxford Handbook of Juvenile Crime and Juvenile Justice presents a timely compilation of state-of-the-art critical reviews of knowledge about causes of delinquency and their significance for justice policy, and about developments in the juvenile justice system to prevent and control youth crime. The first half of the handbook focuses on juvenile crime and examines trends and patterns in delinquency and victimization, explores causes of delinquency-at the individual, micro-social, and macro-social levels, and from natural and social science perspectives-and their implications for structuring a youth justice system. The second half of the handbook concentrates on juvenile justice and examines a range of issues-including the historical origins and re-invention of the juvenile court; juvenile offenders' mental health status and considerations of trial competence and culpability; intake, diversion, detention, and juvenile courts; and transfer/waiver strategies-and considers how the juvenile justice system itself influences delinquency. The Oxford Handbook of Juvenile Crime and Juvenile Justice provides a comprehensive overview of juvenile crime and juvenile justice administration by authors who are all leading scholars involved in cutting-edge research, and is an essential resource for scholars, students, and justice officials.
Auteur
Barry C. Feld is Centennial Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of eight books, including: Bad Kids: Race and the Transformation of the Juvenile Court (OUP 1999 and winner of Hindelang Outstanding Book Award, American Society of Criminology, and Outstanding Book Award, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences) and Readings in Juvenile Justice Administration (OUP 1999). Donna M. Bishop is Professor of Criminal Justice at Northeastern University.
Contenu
Preface Part I. Nature and Patterns of Juvenile Offending 1. Howard L. Snyder, Juvenile Delinquents and Juvenile Justice Clientele: Trends and Patterns in Crime and Justice System Responses 2. Alexis R. Piquero and Douglas B. Weiss, Heterogeneity in Delinquency 3. Christopher J. Schreck and Eric A. Stewart, Victim-Offender Overlap and its Implications for Juvenile Justice Offending and Victimization Part II. Individual Level Variables 4. Melissa Peskin, Andrea L. Glenn, Yu Gao, Jianghong Liu, Robert A. Schug, Yaling Yang, and Adrian Raine, Personal Characteristics of Delinquents: Neurobiology, Genetic Predispositions, Individual Psychosocial Attributes 5. Jennifer L. Woolard, Adolescent Development, Delinquency, and Juvenile Justice 6. Tamara M. Haegerich and Patrick H. Tolan, Delinquency and Comorbid Conditions 7. David P. Farrington, Predictors of Violent Young Offenders Part III. Social Contexts and Delinquency 8. Ronald L. Simons, Leslie Gordon Simons, and Donna Hancock, Linking Family Processes and Adolescent Delinquency: Issues, Theories, and Research Findings 9. Gary D. Gottfredson, Schools and Delinquency 10. Mark Warr, The Social Side of Delinquent Behavior 11. Cheryl L. Maxson and Kristy N. Matsuda, Gang Delinquency 12. Charis E. Kubrin, Communities and Delinquency Part IV. Social Process and Delinquency 13. Robert Agnew, Strain and Delinquency 14. Ronald L. Akers and Christine S. Sellers, Social Learning Theory 15. Deanna L. Wilkinson, An Emergent Situational and Transactional Theory of Urban Youth Violence 16. Tom R. Tyler and Lindsay Elizabeth Rankin, Legal Socialization and Delinquency 17. John H. Laub and Sarah L. Boonstoppel, Understanding Desistance from Juvenile Offending: Challenges and Opportunities 18. Brandon C. Welsh, Delinquency Prevention Part V. Juvenile Court: History and Context 19. David S. Tanenhaus, The Elusive Juvenile Court: Its Origins, Practices, and Re-Inventions Part VI. Juvenile Court Clientele 20. Donna M. Bishop and Michael J. Leiber, Racial and Ethnic Differences in Delinquency and Justice System Responses 21. Kimberly Kempf-Leonard, The Conundrum of Girls and Juvenile Justice Processing 22. Jodi Viljoen, Erika Penner, and Ron Roesch, Competence and Criminal Responsibility in Adolescent Defendants: The Roles of Mental Illness and Adolescent Development Part VII. Juvenile Court Case Processing: Screening, Detention, and Trial 23. Edmund F. McGarrell, Policing Juveniles 24. Daniel P. Mears, The Front End of the Juvenile Court: Intake and Informal vs. Formal Processing 25. Jeffrey A. Butts, John K. Roman, Jennifer Lynn-Whaley, Varieties of Juvenile Court - Non-specialized Courts, Teen Courts, Drug Courts, Mental Health Courts 26. William H. Barton, Detention 27. Barry C. Feld, Procedural Rights in Juvenile Courts: Competence and Consequences Part VIII. Sanctioning Delinquents 28. Gordon Bazemore, Restoration, Shame, and the Future of Restorative Practice in U.S. Juvenile Justice 29. Peter W. Greenwood and Susan Turner, Probation and other Non-Institutional Treatment: The Evidence Is In 30. Barry Krisberg, Juvenile Corrections: An Overview 31. Doris Layton MacKenzie and Rachel Freeland, Examining the Effectiveness of Juvenile Residential Programs Part IX. Youth in Criminal Court 32. Barry C. Feld and Donna M. Bishop, Transfer of Juveniles to Criminal Court 33. Edward P. Mulvey and Carol A. Schubert, Youth in Prison and Beyond Part X. Juvenile Justice Policy 34. Michael Tonry and Colleen Chambers, Juvenile Justice Cross-nationally Considered 35. Donna M. Bishop and Barry C. Feld, Trends in Juvenile Justice Policy and Practice