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Reaffirming Rehabilitation in Juvenile Justice

NCJ Number
136847
Author(s)
D Macallair
Date Published
Unknown
Length
23 pages
Annotation
A survey of juvenile correctional systems in California, Massachusetts, Utah, and Washington was used to examine the decline of rehabilitation in juvenile justice that has occurred throughout the United States over the past 20 years.
Abstract
This decline was prompted by conservative demands for retribution and justice. The ascendance of the justice model over the rehabilitation model was facilitated by the progressive community's acceptance of the justice model as a way to restrict the growing number of juveniles under detention. The intention was to impose confinement limitations through standardized sentencing. Instead, the justice model has led to an unprecedented rise in the number of imprisoned youth and a deterioration in prison conditions. The author maintains that research has proved the superior effectiveness of rehabilitation models in changing patterns of delinquency. He calls upon the progressive community to reaffirm its commitment to rehabilitation in order to dismantle the institution-based system. Rehabilitation is the only viable strategy for reducing custodial confinement and promoting the humane and effective treatment of troubled youths. 9 figures and 45 references

Publication Format
Document
Publication Type
Survey
Language
English
Country
United States of America
Note
Presented at the annual meeting of the Western Society of Criminology, Berkeley, California, February 1991.