It also highlights a practice and program model relevant to issues faced in the contemporary juvenile justice system.;The second article, entitled, "'Disease and delinquency know no color': Syphilis and African American female delinquency" addresses the nature of female delinquency from the ...
The Juvenile Justice Reinvestment Act (“JJRA”) allows sixteen- and seventeen-year-old juveniles to go through the juvenile justice system when accused of misdemeanors, low-level felonies, and other non-violent crimes.[5]With this change comes a vari...
Depending on the circumstances, a juvenile may receive a juvenile or adult sentence, or both. This Article argues the need for North Dakota to adopt some form of EJJ. Following a brief introduction, Part II outlines the history and evolution of the juvenile justice system. Three possible EJJ...
7B: Juvenile Code 8: Evidence 8A: Interpreters for Deaf Persons 8B: Interpreters for Deaf Persons 8C: Evidence Code 9: Jurors 10: Notaries 10A: Notaries 10B: Notaries 11: Oaths 12: Statutory Construction 13: Citizenship Restored 14: Criminal Law 15: Criminal Procedure 15A: Criminal Procedure ...
2006). Mowing not only destroys nests and clutches, but the timing of these activities in mid to late summer often coincides with high fledgling abundances resulting in large juvenile mortality from machinery collision (Tews et al. 2013). Certain species that now more commonly breed in hayfields...