A century of Juvenile Justice

A Century of Juvenile Justice link

Edited by Margaret K. Rosenheim, Franklin E. Zimring, David S. Tanenhaus, and Bernardine Dohrn, University of Chicago Press (2002)

Foreword, by Adele Simmons

Preface

1. Juvenile Justice in Historical Perspective

Chapter 1. Changing Conceptions of Child Welfare in the United States, 1820-1935, by Michael Grossberg

Chapter 2. The Historical Roots and Growth of American Juvenile Justice, 1850-1950, by David Tanenhaus

Chapter 3. Treatment Alternatives for Troubled Youth: The History of Multiple Systems in Search of Rational Organization, by Paul Lerman

2. Juvenile Justice and Legal Theory

Chapter 4. The Criteria and Consequences of Childhood in American Law, by Elizabeth Scott

Chapter 5. The Common Thread -- Diversion in the Jurisprudence of Juvenile Courts, by Franklin Zimring

Chapter 6. Status Offenses and Status Offenders, by Lee Teitelbaum

3. Juvenile Justice and Social Science

Chapter 7. A Century of Delinquency Research and Delinquency Theory, by John Laub

Chapter 8. Serious and Violent Juvenile Offenders, by David Farrington and Rolf Loeber

Chapter 9. The Social Ecology of Child Endangerment, by Frank Furstenberg and Mark Testa

4. Juvenile Justice and Child Welfare

Chapter 10. Education, Schooling and the Juvenile Court, by Bernardine Dohrn

Chapter 11. The Politics of Childhood in the United States, by Peter Edelman

5. Juvenile Justice in Comparative Perspective

Chapter 12. The Modern American Juvenile Court, by Margaret K. Rosenheim

Chapter 13. Juvenile Justice in Japan, by Akira Morita

Chapter 14. Child Endangerment and Child Protection in England, by John Eekelaar

Chapter 15. The Divergent Development of Delinquency Policy in English and Scottish Law, by Anthony Bottoms

Chapter 16. Modern Juvenile Justice in Europe, by Jaap Doek