“Granting” Justice, Debating Delinquency: The Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Offenses Control Act and the UNC Training Center on Delinquency and Youth Crime, 1961–1967
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article argues that 1961 to 1967 was a critical period when federal, state, and academic institutions looked with hope toward emerging methods in behavioral and social psychology to train juvenile justice officials and to treat delinquent children. Reflecting liberal optimism regarding the possibility of reforming individual behavior without structural change, the Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Offenses Control Act of 1961 provided project funding to cities, nonprofits, and universities. Using the University of North Carolina’s Training Center on Delinquency and Youth Crime as a case study, this article examines how federal funding was used for “experiments” with group therapy, youth incarceration, and cocreation of juvenile justice. Though largely inconclusive, these experiments demonstrated the existence of alternatives to the hyperinstitutionalization of juvenile offenders that accelerated after the Supreme Court’s 1967 decision of In re Gault.
本文认为,1961 年至 1967 年是一个关键时期,联邦、州和学术机构满怀希望地将目光投向行为和社会心理学的新兴方法,以培训少年司法官员和治疗犯罪儿童。1961 年的《青少年犯罪和青少年犯罪控制法案》(Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Offenses Control Act of 1961)为城市、非营利组织和大学提供了项目资金,这反映了自由主义者对不进行结构性变革而改革个人行为的可能性持乐观态度。本文以北卡罗来纳大学少年犯罪和青少年犯罪培训中心为例,探讨了联邦资金如何被用于团体治疗、青少年监禁和青少年司法共同创造的 "实验"。尽管这些实验在很大程度上没有得出结论,但它们表明,在最高法院于 1967 年对 In re Gault 案做出裁决之后,存在着替代将少年犯过度机构化的办法。