History
Supreme Court
Case Processing
Transfer to Adult Court
Sentencing & Reform
100

This doctrine justified the creation of juvenile courts by treating the state as a parental figure.

What is parens patriae?

100

This 1967 case guaranteed juveniles the right to counsel (an attorney).

What is In re Gault?

100

This decision point determines whether a juvenile case is dismissed, diverted or formally petitioned.

What is intake?

100

This type of transfer occurs when statutes require certain offenses to start in criminal court.

What is statutory exclusion?

100

This is the most common disposition ordered in juvenile court.

What is probation?

200

The first juvenile court in the United States was established in this city in 1899.

What is Chicago (Cook County, Illinois)?

200

This case required proof "beyond a reasonable doubt" in juvenile delinquency adjudications.

What is In re Winship?

200

This hearing determines whether a detained youth should remain in custody before adjudication.

What is a detention hearing?
200
This transfer mechanism allows prosecutors to choose whether to file in juvenile or criminal court.

What is prosecutorial discretion (direct file)?

200

This federal law mandates deinstitutionalization of status offenders.

What is the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA)?

300

Early juvenile courts differed from criminal courts because they emphasized this over  punishment.

What is rehabilitation?

300

This case ruled the juveniles do not have a constitutional right to a jury trial.

What is McKeiver v. Pennsylvania?

300

This agreement allows a youth to avoid formal adjudication by complying with certain conditions. 

What is a consent decree?
300

In what state is there no specified minimum age to be transferred to adult court for the crime of murder?

What is Pennsylvania?

300
This sentencing approach combines juvenile sanctions with a suspended adult sentence.

What is blended sentencing?

400

By the late 1960s, critics argued juvenile courts denied youth these protections.

What are due process rights?

400

This 2005 case abolished the juvenile death penalty based on adolescent brain development.

What is Roper v. Simmons?

400

This tool is used to predict the likelihood that a youth will reoffend and how to tailor an intervention.

What is a risk/needs assessment?

400

This provision requires youth once convicted as adults to always be tried in criminal court thereafter.

What is "once an adult, always an adult"?

400

This is the main reason why juveniles are transferred to adult court. 

What is to be given a harsher punishment/sentence?

500

During these two decades, there was an expansion of laws that allowed juveniles to be tried in adult court in order to crack down on juvenile crime.

What are the 1980s and 1990s?

500

This case ruled that the Eighth Amendment forbids a mandatory sentence of life in prison without parole for a juvenile convicted of homicide.

What is Miller v. Alabama?

500

Only about this percentage of formally processed juvenile cases are waived to criminal court.

What is less than 1%?

500

Research has found that transferring youth to adult court has led to this outcome.

What is recidivism?

500

This scientific finding underpins modern juvenile sentencing reform and Supreme Court rulings.

What is adolescent brain development (i.e. impulse control and judgment)?
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