We Don’t Always Mean What We Say: Attitudes Toward Statutory Exclusion of Juvenile Offenders From Juvenile Court Jurisdiction

Tina M. Zottoli, Tarika Daftary-Kapur, P. Zapf
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

In the United States, juvenile offenders are often excluded from the jurisdiction of juvenile court on the basis of age and crime type alone. Data from national surveys and data from psycholegal research on support for adult sanction of juvenile offenders are often at odds. The ways in which questions are asked and the level of detail provided to respondents and research participants may influence expressed opinions. Respondents may also be more likely to agree with harsh sanctions when they have fewer offender- and case-specific details to consider. Here, we test the hypothesis that attitudes supporting statutory exclusion laws measured in the absence of specific case-specific details may not be the best indicator of agreement with such laws in practice. We found that support for statutory exclusion was affected by exposure to information about an offender’s unique situation and by exposure to general scientific information about adolescent development. These results suggest that despite apparent widespread agreement with automatic exclusion statutes, laypersons consider factors other than those allowed by the law when they are asked how to treat an individual offender.
我们并不总是言行一致:对少年法院法定排除少年犯的态度
在美国,少年犯往往仅仅因为年龄和犯罪类型就被排除在少年法庭的管辖范围之外。来自全国调查的数据和来自心理法律研究的数据,关于成年人对少年犯的制裁的支持往往不一致。提问的方式以及向受访者和研究参与者提供的详细程度可能会影响所表达的意见。当受访者需要考虑的罪犯和具体案件细节较少时,他们也更有可能同意严厉的制裁。在这里,我们检验了这样一个假设,即在缺乏具体案例具体细节的情况下衡量的支持法定排他性法律的态度可能不是在实践中与此类法律达成一致的最佳指标。我们发现,对法定排除的支持受到有关罪犯独特情况的信息的曝光和有关青少年发展的一般科学信息的曝光的影响。这些结果表明,尽管自动排除法规明显得到广泛认同,但外行人在被问及如何对待个别罪犯时,会考虑法律允许之外的因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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