Bad Kids: Race and the Transformation of the Juvenile Court

Awards:   Winner of Winner of the Outstanding Book Award from The Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences!.
Author:   Barry C. Feld (Centennial Professor of Law, Centennial Professor of Law, University of Minnesota Law School)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9780195097887


Pages:   392
Publication Date:   18 March 1999
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Bad Kids: Race and the Transformation of the Juvenile Court


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Awards

  • Winner of Winner of the Outstanding Book Award from The Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences!.

Overview

Within the past three decades, social and legal changes have transformed the juvenile court from a nominally rehabilitative welfare agency into a second-class criminal court for young offenders. Recent efforts to ""toughen"" juvenile justice policies have resulted in increasingly harsh sanctions that fall disproportionately on minority youths. In this provocative new book, Barry Feld examines what went wrong with the juvenile court and proposes an alternative model for youth crime control and child welfare. The Progressive reformers who created the juvenile court a century ago saw children as relatively blameless and innocent. But recent decades of rising crime rates associated with urban decay have strained this tolerant view of young offenders. Feld relates the 1967 Supreme Court decision In re Gault to the broader social and legal changes associated with the civil rights movement and the Warren Court's ""Due Process Revolution."" Although gault mandated more elaborate procedural safeguards in delinquency hearings, ironically, those protections legitimated the imposition of more punitive sanctions. Since Gault, Feld argues, three decades of judicial, legislative, and administrative reforms have conducted a form of ""criminological triage."" At the ""soft end,"" reforms have shifted noncriminal status offenders, primarily female and white, out of the juvenile justice system into a ""hidden system"" made up of private sector mental health and chemical dependency facilities. At the ""hard end,"" states transfer increasing numbers of young offenders, disproportionately minorities, to criminal court for prosecution as adults. Meanwhile, juvenile courts punish more severely those delinquents-again disproportionately minorities-who remain within the increasingly criminalized juvenile justice system. Feld attributes the current state of affairs to a conceptual flaw inherent in the juvenile court. The juvenile justice system attempts to combine social welfare and social control functions in one organization, but inevitably fulfills both missions badly because of the inherent and irreconcilable contradictions between them. Progressive reformers situated the juvenile court on a number of cultural, legal, and criminological fault lines, where the ideas of child and adult, determinism and free will, immature and responsible, treatment and punishment collide. The past three decades have witnessed a shift from the former to the latter of these binary pairs in response to the racial transformation of cities, the increase in serious youth crime, and the erosion of the rehabilitative assumptions of the juvenile court. The solution, Feld argues, is to uncouple social welfare from criminal social control. States could try all offenders in one integrated criminal justice system with appropriate modifications to accommodate the youthfulness of younger defendants: a graduated, age-culpability sentencing system, separate youth correctional facilities, and the like. Formally recognizing youthfulness as a mitigating factor would provide youths with greater protections and justice than they currently receive in either the juvenile or criminal justice systems. At the same time such a strategy would enable public policies to address directly the social welfare needs of all young people.

Full Product Details

Author:   Barry C. Feld (Centennial Professor of Law, Centennial Professor of Law, University of Minnesota Law School)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 23.40cm , Height: 2.90cm , Length: 15.50cm
Weight:   0.540kg
ISBN:  

9780195097887


ISBN 10:   0195097882
Pages:   392
Publication Date:   18 March 1999
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Reviews

.,. compelling...he does...correctly identify the conceptual flaw in a system. --Juvenile Justice Update<br>


<br>. ..compelling...he does...correctly identify the conceptual flaw in a system. --Juvenile Justice Update<br>


. ..compelling...he does...correctly identify the conceptual flaw in a system. --Juvenile Justice Update


Author Information

Barry Feld is Centennial Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School. He has written five books and more than three dozen law review and criminology articles on juvenile justice administration with specil emphases on serious offenders, procedural justice, and youth sentencing policy.

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