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Concepts of who and what children are and what childhood consists
of have changed over time. Our historical and contemporary notions
of childhood also change according to the context of the
interaction between the child and the state. This book is concerned
with various ideas of what childhood consists of where the child is
involved with the legal system. An identification of legal concepts
of childhood can offer many insights into our treatment of
children,the capacities which we expect them (possibly unfairly) to
possess and the extent of any protection which they deserve or can
expect from those charged with the responsibility for their
welfare. Each essay in this collection focuses on a particular
legal discipline which centrally involves children whether as
litigants, victims or perpetrators of crimes, owners of property,
recipients of welfare services etc. The object of the analysis is
to assess how children are regarded by lawyers in each discipline;
for example, as objects of concern, requiring protection; as
autonomous possessors of rights; as lacking in moral consciousness
or full mental capacity; or as fully aware of and accountable for
their actions. In order to make comparisons with notions of
childhood in other contexts, the substantive part of the book will
also include essays on the perspectives on childhood at the core of
other disciplines including sociology, psychology, philosophy and
literature.
The role of the public prosecutor in sentencing has become the
subject of intense debate in recent years. Experts recognize that
their influence on sentencing practice is profound, and that the
implications of their influence is far-reaching. In this study, the
author assesses the influence of the public prosecutor in Scotland,
the Netherlands, England, Wales and Germany over the process of
sentencing offenders in the criminal justice system. The text
offers a detailed analysis of prosecutorial power to issue
sanctions, such as fines, warnings and referrals to rehabilitation
at the pre-trial stage, and develops three new models of justice
seeking to analyze and explain the increasing use of prosecutorial
power. The overlap between the role of prosecutor and judge is also
discussed.
Over the last two decades, the study of languages and writing
systems and their relationship to literacy acquisition has begun to
spread beyond studies based mostly on English language learners. As
the worldwide demand for literacy continues to grow, researchers
from different countries with different language backgrounds have
begun examining the connection between their language and writing
system and literacy acquisition. This volume is part of this new,
emerging field of research. In addition to reviewing psychological
research on reading (the author's specialty), the reader is
introduced to the Hebrew language: its structure, its history, its
writing system, and the issues involved in being fluently literate
in Hebrew. Chapters 1-4 introduce the reader to the Hebrew language
and word structure and focuses on aspects of Hebrew that have been
specifically researched by experimental cognitive psychologists.
The reader whose only interest is in the psychological mechanisms
of reading Hebrew may be satisfied with these chapters. Chapters
5-8 briefly surveys the history of the Hebrew language and its
writing system, the origin of literacy in Hebrew as one of the
first alphabetic systems, and then raises questions about the
viability (or possibility) of having full-scale literacy in Hebrew.
Together, the two sets of chapters present the necessary background
for studying the psychology of reading Hebrew and literacy in
Hebrew. This volume is appropriate for anyone interested in
comparative reading and writing systems or in the Hebrew language
in particular. This includes linguists, researchers, and graduate
students in such diverse fields as cognitive psychology,
psycholinguistics, literacy education, English as a second
language, and communication disorders.
Youth Justice is a key area of the current governments criminal
justice policy in England and Wales. It has been the subject of an
inordinate amount of recent legislation seeking to enhance the
criminal courts powers to punish and prevent offending and
re-offending by young people. This legislation attempts to prevent
offending through criminal justice measures and there is little
attempt to use non-criminal or civil law procedures to achieve the
same result. This book seeks to challenge that focus and to
question why delinquency in young people has been so firmly
criminalized in this jurisdiction. The book addresses the
consequences of criminalization in terms of the effectiveness of
the measures used as well as the implications for the social
construction of youth and childhood and our attitudes towards the
young. Criminalization of young peoples behaviour results in them
being labeled as criminal,losing identity as an individual, losing
their childhood through the process of taking adult responsibility
for their actions and, in policy terms, becoming viewed as a crime
problem rather than as a product of failing social policy regarding
employment, education and youth culture. At a society level it is
contended that the identification of young people with criminal
activity and the negative public image that results creates a
culture of fear and distrust which may in turn create further
possibilities for criminalization of their behaviour. A comparative
perspective in this work examines welfare-based responses to youth
crime in other European jurisdictions and questions whether the
criminal justice process is an appropriate context in which to deal
with young peoples problematic behaviour. This book has been
shortlisted for the 2007 SLSA Book Prize.
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