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Strategic Planning in Juvenile Justice - Defining the Toughest Kids (From Violent Juvenile Offenders - An Anthology, P 31-51, 1984, Robert A Mathias et al, ed. - See NCJ-95108)

NCJ Number
95165
Author(s)
J A Fagan; E Hartstone
Date Published
1984
Length
21 pages
Annotation
Chronically violent juvenile offenders should be targeted for the extra-precautionary measures of special treatment or secure confinement.
Abstract
A youth with at least two adjudications for a violent crime should be considered chronically violent. The future of the juvenile justice system may rest on its ability to respond to serious and violent juvenile offenders through a blend of punishment and rehabilitation. Otherwise the legislatures will continue to turn to the adult system to handle the toughest cases. Given the need for strategic allocation of scarce resources, juvenile justice agencies need to fashion appropriate dispositional alternatives matched to youths whose risk to public safety requires the most intensive care and restrictive placements. This is the primary policy purpose in defining a special class of juvenile offenders. A case study of a major Federal initiative focusing on chronically violent delinquents is instructive. In 1981 the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention implemented Part I of the Violent Juvenile Offender Research and Development Program. The program demonstrated that a definition of violence or seriousness cannot by itself achieve the goals of any delinquency policy. The juvenile justice system must define legally and hold accountable those youths who meet the criteria through court action and appropriate treatment. Footnotes and 52 references are provided.

Grant Number(s)
80-JN-AX-0006(S2)
82-MU-AX-0003(S1)
Sponsoring Agency
US Securities and Exchange Cmssn
Address

100 F Street, NE, Washington, DC 20549-2736, United States

Sale Source
National Institute of Justice/
Address

Box 6000, Dept F, Rockville, MD 20849, United States

NCJRS Photocopy Services
Address

Box 6000, Rockville, MD 20849-6000, United States

Language
English
Country
United States of America
Note
Earlier version presented at the Annual Meeting of the Western Society of Criminology, Las Vegas, Nevada, February 1983. Available on microfiche as NCJ-95108.