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Mason, C.A., Chapman, D.A., Chang, S., and Simons, J. (2003). Impacting re-offense rates among youth sentenced in adult court: An epidemiological examination of the Juvenile Sentencing Alternatives Project. Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 32, 205-214.The current study
examines the impact of a program aimed at reducing re-offending among
juveniles transferred to adult court in Miami-Dade County, Florida.
Initiated in 1998, the Juvenile Sentencing Advocacy Project (JSAP) worked
to increase the degree to which defense lawyers, prosecutors, judges, and
police officers considered the developmental status of youth charged with
crimes, as well as the contextual basis for their behavior and their
potential for rehabilitation. Through such activities, the goal was to
increase the use of juvenile sanctions, rather than traditional adult
sentences. Based on previous research, it was predicted that increased
use of juvenile sanctions would be associated with fewer youth
re-offending. This paper examines 162
youth who were transferred to and sentenced in adult court during 1999.
Re-offense patterns were monitored through June 2001. Analyses using
epidemiological measures of effect found that the use of juvenile
sanctions significantly increased following implementation of JSAP and
that youth receiving adult probation or boot camp were 1.74 to 2.29 times
more likely to re-offend than were youth receiving juvenile sanctions.
The increased use of juvenile sanctions following implementation of JSAP
corresponded to an 11.2 to 15.3% decrease in the number of youth one would
have anticipated would re-offend had previous patterns of sentencing
continued. |
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