Chapter 3- Responding To Youth Crime: Historical Origins Of Juvenile Justice Legislation Flashcards
Childhood as a cultural artifact
Childhood is socially constructed and jot biologically based
Earliest form of youth regulation
Classical legal governance
Made very little distinction between young and adult offenders and was primarily concerned with establishing guilt or innocence
For a crime to have occurred in the legal sense
Acts reus
Mens rea
Before 17th century childhood
European society viewed children as “little adults” and made few social and cultural distinctions on the basis of age
Doli incapax
Children under the age of 7 are incapable of guilt and can’t be held criminally responsible
Children age 7-14 were considered fully doli incapax and unless the crown can prove otherwise, could not be legally convicted
Classical legal approach goals
Retribution ( and eye for an eye, punishment deserved)
And
Deterrence (preventing crime through threat of punishment)
4 explanations to move towards Juvenile Delinquents Act (1908)
- Socio-economics
- immigration
- urbanization
- industrialization - Social reformers
- reformatory and industrial schools
- public schools and child welfare
- international influences - Social welfare penality
- the Canadian state
- the rise of social welfare
- changes in punishment - Anti-institutional discourse
- dissatisfaction with institutionalization
- appeal of community strategies
- probation
Parens patriae
Requires that the state act “on the behalf of the child’s best interest” when parents are ill equipped to care and control them
Modern legal governance
Particularistic- governance treats each case as unique
Knowledge based - the offender is a subject of knowledge and is investigated
A dense interlocking system of social controls - the community, and not just the state, plays a key role in exercising control and surveillance over offenders
JDA based on 3 interconnected ideas (1908)
Parens patriae
Interventionist state
Best interest of the child
Status offences
Actions that would not incite legal repercussions if done by an adult but because of the status (age) of the person engaging in the act, is a criminal offence. (Ex: drinking, gambling, promiscuity, etc)
Indeterminate sentencing
(Rather than fixed)
Provides another means of discretion
Lacks proportionality
Limitations to JDA
No concern for children’s rights
- indeterminate sentencing
- judges have too much discretion
- proportionality
Variation between provinces
- age differences (adult designation= adult sentencing)
Reformatories were very far (isolated)
- take on car real qualities
- disconnected from the rest of society
Status offences
- offences that were acceptable for adults to engage in but if a child was caught doing the same action, they were criminally liable