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juvenile court |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
juvenile courtSpecial court handling problems of delinquent, neglected, or abused children. Two types of cases are processed by a juvenile court: civil matters, often concerning care of an abandoned or impoverished child, and criminal matters, arising from antisocial behaviour by the child. Most statutes provide that all persons under a given age (often 18 years) must first be processed by the juvenile court, which can then, at its discretion, assign the case to an ordinary court. Before the creation of the first juvenile court, in Chicago in 1899, and the subsequent creation of other such courts in the United States and other countries (e.g., Canada in 1908; England in 1908; France in 1912; Russia in 1918; Poland in 1919; Japan in 1922; and Germany in 1923), juveniles were tried in the same courts as adults. |
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| Casas was charged as an adult after a Sylmar Juvenile Court judge found that he was unfit to be tried as a juvenile. Chapter 6 outlines juvenile court reforms that are needed in the face of growing evidence about juvenile sex offenders and offending. In response to this call from the community, the Jane Addams Juvenile Court Foundation has procured volunteer attorneys willing to facilitate with this procedure. |
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