The age of delinquent juveniles is disappointing for today's society. Juvenile offenders may be convicted of violating the law from robbery to escape from home. In order to better understand the rights granted to minors, consider the following situations facing the criminal justice system in dealing with juvenile detainees. The two major areas of discussion included the juvenile's right at the time of arrest and additional protection given to the boy.
This page focuses on juvenile crimes in the United States. For general information on juvenile delinquency, please refer to juvenile crimes. In addition, the term juvenile delinquency normally treats adolescents as victims and attackers, but this page considers young people as real criminals. Information and statistics on young people as criminals and victims are very different. For information on young people as victims of violent attacks, see child trafficking, child abuse, child sexual abuse or child prostitution.
Juvenile delinquency means that underage children (usually 10 to 17 years old) are involved in illegal conducts and activities. Juvenile delinquency refers to persistent behavior of mischief and disobedience and is also used to refer to children who are considered to be uncontrolled by their parents and are subject to legal proceedings of the court system. Juvenile delinquency is also known as "juvenile crime", and each province has a separate legal system to deal with juvenile delinquency. In order to explore this concept, please consider the definition of juvenile delinquency below.
The US federal government has enacted a juvenile criminal, a law that uniformly handles 1974 juvenile justice and illegal law. The law is designed to manage juvenile delinquency strike prevention programs (currently $ 0.9 million per year), collect national statistics on juvenile delinquency, and provide juvenile justice offenses within the Ministry of Justice Establishes the prevention office (OJJDP) and manages four anti-executive tasks concerning minors' custody rights. Specifically, the operation command:
The juvenile delinquency problem always existed in American society. Many things are done to reduce juvenile delinquency and retaliatory judicial criminal law is generally excluded, but juvenile delinquency, especially violence is still very real in our society. There are six major theoretical approaches that can be used to answer two important questions about juvenile delinquency. The first problem is the cause and justification of juvenile delinquency and special violence at the micro- or internal level. The second problem is the possible causes and reasons for juvenile delinquency, especially violence, at the macro- or societal level.
Broken road: juvenile violence and crime in sociological theory Sylvia Khromina, University of Massachusetts, Boston, sylvia.khromina001 @ ub.edu