Purpose of the Study
The study examined racial and ethnic differences in the use of mental health and substance abuse services among youths placed in the juvenile justice system (Lee et al., 2017). The literature review has provided information to support the need for the study, and they have included other studies that have focused and demonstrated the need for additional research on the topic. All the studies included are relevant to the current study, and they lay a good foundation for the present study. Using the literature review, the authors have demonstrated the need for further research and pointed out the faced problem. The dependent variable was a measure of whether the respondents had utilized mental health or substance abuse services in the 12 months before their arrest. The independent variable was the race/ethnicity of the respondents. All the variables were clearly defined with an explanation of how they were used in the study. The study made use of a cross-sectional design. The study subjects comprised 181 youths aged between 13-19 years who are residents...
One facility was for boys, the other for girls making the study participants representative of the population. However, the population under study was Western...…in the article is confirmation of the many reports we read regarding there being racial profiling of youths. Youths of color do not receive the same treatment as White youths, making them more likely to be incarcerated without receiving mental health services. The article pushes for increased pressure to modify policy and practice. Students should be educated on how to handle youths of color and what they should be doing to assist them instead of criminalizing them. Racial discrimination is deep-rooted in our systems, and it is time we started taking action to remedy the injustices. The goal of juvenile justice should be to reform…
References
Lee, L. H., Goodkind, S., & Shook, J. J. (2017). Racial/ethnic disparities in prior mental health service use among incarcerated adolescents. Children and Youth Services Review, 78, 23-31. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0190740917303468
In principle, the United States should follow international treaties only if it is a signatory to that specific treaty. However, the Supreme Court of the United States cannot ignore international standards completely either. There are several reasons for this. The world is becoming more and more globalized. Large numbers of immigrants have flocked to the United States in the last several decades and likewise American military and the FBI increasingly
Ideally, diversion should take place at the earliest stages of juvenile justice processing, to refer a youth to essential services and avert further involvement in the system. On the other hand, diversion mechanisms can be put into place at later stages of justice processing, to avoid further penetration into the system and expensive out-of-home placements. Efforts to keep youth out of the juvenile justice system who otherwise would be processed
Juvenile Justice System currently faces a number of challenges in dealing with delinquency. Many of those problems are underlying problems such as mental health issues, child abuse, child neglect, lack of funding, and the disconnection between professions dealing with children, all of which contribute to delinquency. The high incidence of child abuse and child neglect, in particularly, have been directly linked to delinquency and must be sufficiently addressed. In the
Juvenile Justice The Juvenile Criminal Justice System Juvenile courts and detention separate from adult courts is a relatively new concept (ABA, 2010). Before the turn of the twentieth century, the cases for individuals of all ages were managed by the same criminal and civil courts, and the same sentences were handed out to all parties. Of course, this has changed to a great extent since 1899 in the United States, but there
This Act was more focused on preventing juvenile delinquency and separating the juveniles from the adults in the correction facilities. It was argued that the juveniles learnt even worse crimes and became more radical criminals if detained together with the adult offenders. This was more pronounced during the 'Progressive Era' with proponents like Morrison Swift suggesting that the juvenile delinquents only benefited to learn more criminal tactics from the
The rest were charged only with minor offenses. The harshness of punishment in such cases appears to be disproportional to the crime. Indeed, Macallair states that the system was originally implemented to target the "worst of the worst." This does not appear to be the case in reality. A further problem specific to Florida entails the disproportionate representation of race in cases transferred to the adult court system. According to
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