International Handbook on Juvenile Justice
By (Author) Donald J. Shoemaker
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
21st June 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Juvenile offenders
Age groups: children
Age groups: adolescents
Comparative law
Reference works
364.36
Hardback
352
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
709g
This reference comparing systems of juvenile justice in 19 nations around the world is representative of different principles and policies, customs and governmental and legal institutions and practices in both industrialised and developing countries. An interdisciplinary team of scholars and legal experts offers a cross-sectional survey of regional, economic, political and societal factors. Some also describe the impact of different societies on the procedures used to handle and rehabilitate juvenile delinquents and define various influences that some countries have had on others. Each expert analyses the history, formal and informal policies, current issues and problems, and trends and future prospects of juvenile justice in a similar manner, making this truly a comparative survey. Directories of key agencies and periodicals in the various countries and relevant bibliographical data further enrich this major reference. The book is designed for advanced undergraduates and graduate students, teachers, practitioners, and government officials concerned with criminal justice, corrections and juvenile delinquency.
DONALD J. SHOEMAKER, Associate Professor of Sociology, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, published the third edition of his book Theories of Delinquency in January, 1996. His research centers currently on juvenile delinquency.