1 HISTORY OF THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM
2 MEASUREMENT OF JUVENILE CRIME
3 Theories of Delinquency
4 JUVENILES AND THE POLICE
5 THE JUVENILE COURT SYSTEM
100

American understanding of children originated in the child-rearing practices and values brought to the New World by which group in the late 1600’s?

Who are the English Puritans?

100

___________________: the age a juvenile first begins committing delinquent acts.

What is the Age of Onset?

100

An effective criminological theory can demonstrate _______________.

What is causation?

100

What is the primary goal of juvenile justice and criminal justice systems?

What is to curtail offending behavior?

100

________ allows a judge to mix and match sentencing options.

What is Blended sentence?

200

England began to legislate ages of culpability, and laws were passed recognizing that youths under the age of _______ should not be held responsible for criminal activity.

What is 7?

200

The continuation of delinquent behaviors as a youth ages, often with an escalation of seriousness in the criminal offending is?

What is Persistence?

200

_________________ and ______________ asserted that human beings are rational and make choices based on their own free will instead of looking to spiritual explanations. 

Who are Cesare Beccaria and Jeremy Bentham?

200

Counseling involving parents/guardians to focus on behavior is an example of what type of police interaction with policing?

What is informal?

200

What type of hearing sometimes occurs during the adjudicatory hearing?

 What is Dispositional hearing?

300

The Court had the option of invoking ______________ where they could refuse to enforce sanctions against children due to the dearth of common-law standards and statutes applicable to them.

What is nullification?

300

As indicated in the age crime curve, what age will the majority of juveniles cease offending by?

What is early 20's?

300

___________ ___________ is a related concept that involves the interaction of social groups competing for resources in the same area.

What is Social ecology?

300

Name 2 services that School Resource Officers provide.

What is:

  • Provide Law Enforcement Services

  • Act as community liaisons 

  • Teach substance abuse/gang intervention classes

  • Mentors

  • Facilitate Community Service Projects

  • Serve as a positive presence at schools (If done correctly)

300

Which court case asserted that life without parole as a sentencing decision for juveniles should be applied only when offenses reflected “irreparable corruption.”

What is Montgomery v. Louisiana (2016)?

400

What are the three types of Houses of Refuge?

What is bridewells, reformatories, and cottage reformatories?

400

An annual compilation of crime data from all law enforcement agencies in the US.

What is the Uniform Crime Report (UCR)?

400

______________: individuals have some degree of free will in choosing their actions but these choices are limited because some factors are outside their control.

What is Neoclassicalism?

400

_____________ officers were hired specifically to communicate with runaways and truants, and to patrol locations—often crime-ridden—where these juveniles were likely to hide.

What are female officers?

400

In what type of hearing are youths are protected against self-incrimination, and cross-examination of all witnesses is permitted?

What is Adjudicatory hearing?

500

Who is referred to as the father of probation?

Who is John Augustus?

500

What are two Problems with the UCR?

What are Validity and Reliability?

500

This theory was introduced in the late 20th century, assumes that offenders make a choice to commit crime based on the opportunities that are available to them in their surroundings. 

What is Rational Choice Theory?

500

Counseling involving parents/guardians to focus on behavior is an example of what type of police interaction with policing?

What is informal?

500

What two options do juvenile courts have with juveniles after detention hearings?

Pretrial Release or Preventative Detention

600

This latin term became the guiding principle of the juvenile court.

What is Parens Patriae?

600

According to the Age-crime curve:A phenomenon that indicates that as a child grows into the teenage years, he or she is more likely to

  • Take risks

  • Be impulsive

  • Behave irrationally

600

A school of criminality that believed that criminality did not result from individual choice but from factors beyond an individual’s control.

What is positivism?

600

Name the categories that The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) organizes police–juvenile interactions into.

What are 

  • Youth-initiated contact 

  • Police-initiated contact 

  • Contact resulting in arrest 

  • Victimization

600

What is it called when a serious offender or status offender is detained for their own protection or the protection of society?

What is Preventative Detention?

700

Parens patriae was upheld in which court case that involved the incarceration of Mary Ann Crouse at the request of her mother but without the approval of her father. 

What is Ex Parte Crouse (1839)?

700

An annual survey conducted by the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

What is National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)?

700

What four factors must be present to demonstrate causation?

What are: 

theoretical rationale

correlation 

time sequence

non spurious

700

This program, implemented in schools across America in 1991, was meant to counteract the attraction of gang membership.

What is the G.R.E.A.T. program?

700

_______________ sentencing: sets a specific amount of time to be served for a specific crime, and the time is often mandated by statute.

What is Determinate sentencing?

800

Which Amendment played a role in the changing of Lee Boyd Malvo's sentence?

What is the Eighth Amendment?

800

What are the primary methods used to gather juvenile correctional statistics?

What are The Children in Custody Survey (CIC), the National Survey of Youth in Custody, and the National Council on Crime and Delinquency (NCCD)?

800

Routine activities theorists Lawrence Cohen and Marcus Felson describe what three components in the commission of crime?

What are: 

  1. A motivated offender

  2. A suitable target

  3. Lack of capable guardianship

800

What must happen for the fifth amendment to be in effect?

What is: Questioning must take place when juveniles are in police custody and they don’t feel free to leave.

800

At what 3 points can detention hearings occur?

What are

  1. at the time youths are brought in by law enforcement

  2. during or after a review to determine if referral to juvenile court is appropriate

  3. after the adjudicatory hearing