Search VBW Research Network

Showing posts with label Juvenile Justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juvenile Justice. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

The @macfound #JuvenileJustice Status Report 2015


The @macfound #JuvenileJustice Status Report 2015
Download PDF: click here

"This report defines developmentally appropriate best practices in nine key juvenile justice policy areas and examines which states (and the District of Columbia) have, as of mid-2015, incorporated those practices into their juvenile justice statutes. The policy areas are status offense rules, age limits for juvenile court jurisdiction, transfer to adult court, access to counsel, competency to stand trial, courtroom shackling, solitary confinement, juvenile records, and sex offender registration."


The MacArthur Foundation. Juvenile Justice in a Developmental Framework, A 2015 Status Report. Rep. Chicago: John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, 2015. https://www.macfound.org/media/files/MacArthur_Foundation_2015_Status_Report.pdf

#tweetcite The @macfound #JuvenileJustice 2015 Status Report 2015 http://bit.ly/23vhPrA #TBWcj #VBWResearchNet


Keywords + Tag = The MacArthur Foundation | best practices | juvenile justice | policy change | status offenses | juvenile court jurisdiction | trial | solitary confinement | sex offender registration | 

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

A History of Juvenile Justice Policy in TX


Protecting Texas' Most Precious Resource:
A History of Juvenile Justice Policy in Texas
 Part I the Path to the Texas Youth Council:
Creating a Protective Umbrella for Juvenile Offenders

PDF: Download

Part II The TYC Era: 
Between Rehabilitation and Punishment
1949-2008
PDF: Download

Both reports were accessed through the National Juvenile Justice Network njjn.org, you can follow the group on Twitter @NJJNetwork and Facebook facebook.com/nationaljuvenilejusticenetwork  

The report was authored by Dr. William Bush of Texas A&M @TAMUSanAntonio University-San Antonio Department of History and edited by Isela Gutierrez @TexasCJC.  The reports were designed by Kim Wilks.


Keywords + Tag = juvenile | history | Prison Public Memory Project | Texas Youth Commission | TYC | Texas Youth Council | Dr. William Bush | Texas A&M | San Antonio | rehabilitation | punishment | Isela Gutierrez | Texas Criminal Justice Coalition | Texas CJC | National Juvenile Justice Network | NJJN | Burning Down the House | The End of Juvenile Prison | Nell Bernstein | The Real Recidivism Problem | One Hundred Years of Reform and Relapse at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys | justice | social justice | The Beat Within a Compositional History of Incarcerated Writing | #TBW2015cj 

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Young People’s Experiences in the CJ System

In Their Own Words: Young People’s Experiences in the Criminal Justice System
and Their Perceptions of Its Legitimacy

More Information including Download Report: click here

"While there is a growing consensus that the country needs to re-examine the criminal justice system’s prosecution of serious young offenders, there is little documentation of how this population experiences and perceives the laws, policies, and practices that are intended to hold them accountable.

To address this shortcoming, the John Howard Association, Illinois’ only non-partisan prison watchdog, has completed a provocative new report, In Their Own Words, (PDF) that chronicles six young serious offenders’ journey through Illinois’ criminal justice system, from arrest to incarceration.

Based on this work, JHA's report offers four steps that policymakers should take to improve the fairness and effectiveness of the criminal justice system’s response to youth prosecuted for serious crimes:

1. Empower judges to determine whether serious young offenders should be tried in juvenile or criminal court, regardless of the crime they are accused of committing.

2. Provide young offenders with greater access to counsel during police encounters and pre-trial custody.

3. Ensure that attorneys and judges who deal with this population are trained in adolescent brain development and how to effectively communicate with young people.

4. Establish separate correctional facilities, treatment programs, and a sentencing scheme that takes into account young offenders’ mental immaturity and ongoing development.

Alongside these specific policy recommendations, In Their Own Words focuses on the root causes of violence that plague some of the country’s poorest minority communities, from parts of Chicago's South and West Sides to Ferguson, Missouri. Instead of over-relying on severe criminal penalties, JHA argues that the justice system must build the kind of civic trust that will promote safer communities by meeting people where they are and listening to them in their own words." 


John Howard Association of Illinois (JHA). "In Their Own Words: Young People's Experiences in the Criminal Justice System and Their Perceptions of Its Legitimacy." John Howard Association of Illinois. (2014). Web. 9 Oct 2014. http://thejha.org/words


Keywords + Tag = John Howard Association of Illinois | Criminal Justice | juvenile justice | words | experiences | out of sight out of mind | empathy | minority | unnatural environment | nothingness | degradation | devalued | second chance | children | prisons | understanding | civic trust | youth | listening | communication | brain development | adolescence | correctional facilities | treatment | expression | CJYO | NMSU | legitimacy | next generation | future | think | Voices Behind Walls

Friday, May 30, 2014

OJJDP Journal Vol. 3 Issue 2 Spring 2014


OJJDP Journal of Juvenile Justice
Vol. 3 Issue 2: click here 

A journal I recommend students/teachers of justice review from time to time.  At least to reference the Table of Contents for any content that may be relevant to your area of interest.  We've included the link to the Journal of Juvenile Justice under our Learning links to the right.  Below is the write up that was included with the news blast from the OJJDP.  Highly recommend signing up for their mailing list!

OJJDP has released the spring 2014 issue of the online "Journal of Juvenile Justice." This issue features articles on a study that examines the extent to which system-involved youth had been exposed to trauma, studies that examine pathways to delinquency by gender, and a commentary on the state of mentoring programs.

Access previous issues of the semi-annual, peer-reviewed journal or submit manuscripts to the journal: click here


Keywords: Office of Juvenile Justice Delinquency Prevention, OJJDP, Juvenile Justice, juvenile justice, journal, trauma, pathways, gender, mentoring, peer reviewed journals, manuscripts, Department of Justice, DOJ, research, knowledge, resource, justice resource, justice research, criminal justice research, reading

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

OJJDP Online University


OJJDP Online University 

OJJDP has launched a new Web site for the OJJDP Online University, a central source for the juvenile justice community to easily connect with training and technical assistance. The Online University is a one-stop shop for training courses, Webinars, training and technical assistance events, and materials that OJJDP’s training and technical assistance providers and partners have developed.

The key new features:
A calendar consolidating all the upcoming training and technical assistance events in the juvenile justice field.
“Quick links” to training and resources, including Webinars, online and classroom trainings, and publications.
New browse capabilities.

Resources:
Access the Online University for juvenile justice resources and trainings.

View FAQs about the OJJDP Online University.

Learn more about the Online University at OJJDP’s National Training and Technical Assistance Center.


Juvenile Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice Delinquency Prevention, OJJDP, National Training and Technical Assistance Center, NTTAC, learning, university, OJJDP Online University, Department of Justice, DOJ, technical assistance, webinars, training, juvenile justice field