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The Odyssey of the Juvenile Court: Policy Failure and Institutional Persistence in the Therapeutic State
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
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The human services have come to occupy a vital position in the modern welfare state, penetrating nearly all its activities and institutions. Beyond providing a minimum level of support, these services seek to restructure the behavior of their clients so they can better cope with the demands and challenges of modern life. To realize this goal social personnel employ an approach that can most accurately be defined as therapeutic: the situation of the client is viewed as a condition that must be diagnosed; the caseworker establishes a helping relationship; a suitable treatment plan is designed and implemented. Although the middle class voluntarily avails itself of therapeutic services, public intervention by social personnel has a distinctly lower-class bias and an authoritarian character. The middle class purchases therapeutic services from private providers. The state focuses on marginal populations and its subjects usually have no choice about assuming a client status.
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References
This article began as a paper presented at the 1986 meeting of the American Political Science Association. I would like to thank Theda Skocpol, Francis Fox Piven, George Curtis, and John Drew for their comments on that paper. Stephen Skowronek and Karen Orren guided me through the revision process, and I was further aided by the suggestions of an anonymous referee who reviewed an earlier draft. I was ably assisted in my research by three Hunter College students, Jenelline Connors, Lionel Francois, and Andrea Lewis. I received a grant from the Professional Staff Congress-City University Faculty Research Award Program to help support the writing of this article.
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95. Healy and Bronner, New Light on Delinquency, 223; Young, Social Treatment in Probation and Delinquency, 622; Donzelot, Policing of Families, 97, 116, 118–19.
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99. Young, Social Treatment in Probation and Delinquency, 320, 324–28, 330–31; Donzelot, Policing of Families, 170; Ehrenreich, Professional Altruist, 117–18.
100. Ryerson, Best-Laid Plans, 110–11; Donzelot, Policing of Families, chap. 5.
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108. Allen, “Borderland of the Criminal Law,” 114; Younghusband, “Dilemma of the Juvenile Court,” 12; Caldwell, “Juvenile Court: Its Development and Some Major Problems,” 509.
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112. On the shifting views of the Children's Bureau, see Rosenthal, “Children's Bureau and the Juvenile Court,” 308–11. For a statement by a bureau official supporting child welfare departments as an alternative to the court, see Nutt, “Future of Juvenile Court as a Case-Work Agency,” 377–78.
113. Rosenthal, “Children's Bureau and Juvenile Court,” 312–13.
114. Abbott, “Juvenile Court and a Community Program,” 227, 238–39. On the neighborhood strategy see Young, social Treatment in Probation and Delinquency, 583–59.
115. Platt, Child Savers, 189; Ryerson, Best-Laid Plans, 158–59.
116. On these community programs, see Platt, Child Savers, 183–84.
117. Carr, Delinquency Control, 149, 249–56.
118. Younghusband, “Dilemma of the Juvenile Court,” 20. For an example of this enthusiasm for new techniques, see Miller, Michael M., “Psychodrama in the Treatment Program of a Juvenile Court,” JCL 50 (1960): 453–59Google Scholar.
119. See, for example, August Aichorn Center for Adolescent Residential Care, Inc., Plan for Residence No. 1 (New York, 1981).
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123. Ryerson, Best-Laid Plans, 57–59, 61. The comparison with the star chamber was first advanced by Roscoe Pound in the 1930s. See Pound, Foreword, xxvii.
124. Platt, Child Savers, 152–155.
125. Allen, “Borderland of the Criminal Law,” 116; Dunham, “Juvenile Court: Contradic-tory Orientations in Processing Offenders,” 516–17, 519; Tappan, “Judicial and Administrative Approaches to Children with Problems,” 149, 159; Caldwell, “Juvenile Court: Its Development and Some Major Problems,” 504–06; Yablonsky, “Role of Law and Social Science in Juvenile Court,” 431–33.
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127. Caldwell, “Juvenile Court: Its Development and Some Major Problems,” 507; Yablonsky, “Role of Law and Social Science in Juvenile Court,” 431. See also Allen, “Borderland of the Criminal Law,” 118–19; Fisher, “Juvenile Court,” 78–79; Howard E. Fradkin, “Disposition Dilemmas of American Juvenile Courts,” in Rosenheim, ed., Justice for the Child, 121.
128. Caldwell, “Juvenile Court: Its Development and Some Major Problems,” 507–09; Tappan, “Judicial and Administrative Approaches to Children with Problems,” 147–48, 151, 154–55. For an early statement of this position, see Wigmore, John H., “Juvenile Court vs. Criminal Court,” Illinois Law Review 21 (1926): 375–77Google Scholar.
129. Dunham, “Juvenile Court: Contradictory Orientations in Processing Offenders,” 520–21; Younghusband, “Dilemma of the Juvenile Court,” 17; Studt, “Client's Image of the Juvenile Court,” 209–10.
130. Schramm, Gustav L., “Philosophy of the Juvenile Court,” Annals 261 (Spring 1949): 102–03Google Scholar; Orman W. Ketcham, “The Unfulfilled Promise of the Juvenile Court,” in Rosenheim, ed., Justice for the Child, 25–28; Paul W. Alexander, “Constitutional Rights in the Juvenile Court,” in Rosenheim, ed., Justice for the Child, 84–85, 87–90, 92.
131. Alexander, “Constitutional Rights in Juvenile Court,” 83–84, 92; Fox, “Juvenile Justice Reform,” 1235; Prescott, Peter S., The Child Savers: Juvenile Justice Observed (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1981), 7, 63–64Google Scholar.
132. Ibid., 51, 59–61.
133. In re Gault, 387 U.S. 1 (1967). For a discussion of the Court's reasoning and determination, see Ryerson, Best-Laid Plans, 147ff.
134. Prescott, Child Savers, 65, 219.
135. Fox, “Juvenile Justice Reform,” 1237.
136. Platt, Child Savers, 164–69; Prescott, Child Savers, 5, 18–19, 102.
137. Ibid.
138. Caldwell, “Juvenile Court: Its Development and Some Major Problems,” 497–98, 506.
139. Tappan, “Children and Youth in Criminal Court,” 128, 132; Dunham, “Juvenile Court: Contradictory Orientations in Processing Offenders,” 513, 521.
140. Ryerson, Best-Laid Plans, 104–05.
141. Rosenthal, “Children's Bureau and the Juvenile Court,” 313.
142. Ibid.; Nutt, “Future of Juvenile Court as a Case-Work Agency,” 378.
143. Rosenthal, “Children's Bureau and the Juvenile Court,” 317n40
144. Carr, Delinquency Control, 56–57.
145. Nutt, “Juvenile Court in Relation to the Community,” 5–6.
146. Tappan, “Judicial and Administrative Approaches to Children with Problems,” 155.
147. Nutt, “Juvenile Court in Relation to the Community,” 6–7; Kahn, Court for Children, 243; Alfred J. Kahn, “Court and Community,” in Rosenheim, ed., Justice for the Child, 231–32; Fox, “Juvenile Justice Reform,” 1232.
148. Figures given in Yablonsky, “Role of Law and Social Science in Juvenile Court,” 433; Charles Shireman, Foreword to Rosenheim, ed., Justice for the Child, v–vi.
149. Studt, “Client's Image of the Juvenile Court,” 207–09; Ryerson, Best-Laid Plans, 127–31.
150. Tappan, “Judicial and Administrative Approaches to Children with Problems,” 145; Fisher, “Juvenile Court,” 78; Castillo, Angel, “Juvenile Offenders in Court: The Debate over Treatment,” New York Times, 07 24, 1981, B4Google Scholar.
151. Prescott, Child Savers, 29–30, 219–20.
152. Alexander, “Constitutional Rights in Juvenile Court,” 86.
153. Fox, “Juvenile Justice Reform,” 1238.
154. Nutt, “Responsibility of Juvenile Court and Public Agency,” 315–16; Yablonsky, “Role of Law and Social Science in Juvenile Court,” 433.
155. Prescott, Child Savers, 120, 239.
156. Ibid., 238–40.
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