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        | gave king guardianship/ parens patriae |  
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        | children forced to work for wealthy families, who in turn taught them trade, and farming |  
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        | believed that a childs environment could make them "bad" |  
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        | model of individual diagnosis and individual treatment |  
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        | federal government passed in 1938 |  
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        | 4 d's of juvenile justice system |  
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        | deinstitutionalization, diversion, due process, decriminalization |  
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        | uses punnishment or the threat of other sanctions either formal or informal to prevent future law breaking by showing that there are concequences. |  
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        | one to one interviews, surveys, and anonymous questioners |  
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        | youth are not arrested, they are.... |  
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        | in custody (not crimilizing children) |  
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        | trial (key is that is ends in -tion) |  
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        | convicted (key is the -ed) |  
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        | refers to a difference but not necessarily involving discrimination |  
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        | refers to unfair treatment of a specific group |  
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        | juvenile court act passed in |  
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        | makes status offenses noncriminal acts |  
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        | requires that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty  or property |  
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        | the judicial process wherein young people who come into conflict with the law are held responsible and  accountable for their n behavior |  
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        | uses punishment or the threat of other sanctions either formal or informal to prevent future law breaking by showing there are consequences to aberrant behavior |  
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        | or just deserts is a concept of punishment as a kind of justified revenge |  
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        | the rules of conduct that are the same everywhere because they are basic to human behavior |  
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        | where free independent individuals agree to form a community and give up a portion  of there individual freedom to benefit the security of the group |  
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        | holds that individual within a society agree on basic values |  
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        | suggests that laws are established to keep the dominant class in power |  
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        | says humans are responsible for there own actions |  
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        | consequence for criminal activity |  
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        | says that humans are shaped by their own society and are the products of environmental and culture influences |  
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        | views human behaviors as the product of multiple environmental and cultural influences rather than a single factor |  
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        | the degree to which genetic influence traits or behaviors |  
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        | argues that crime and delinquency are products of conscious decisions made by individuals who rationally weigh, in advance, the costs and benefits of there illegal behavior |  
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        | sometimes called victimization theory because it includes in it an element of culpability |  
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        | biosocial perspective of crime and delinquency |  
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        | hold that propensity for criminal behavior is heritable and interacts  with the environment, a theory supported by evidence derived from a variety of studies |  
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        | explaining crime contend that individual differences in thinking or emotion regulation can explain why some people commit crime and others do not |  
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        | include social disorganization, functionalism, anomie, or strain theory and social control theories |  
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        | suggests that ecological conditions predicted delinquency and that gang membership  is a normal response to social conditions |  
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        | social  disorganization theory |  
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        | contended that urban areas produced delinquency directly by weakening community controls |  
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        crime and deviance serve several "greater" purposes for society like: promoting social solidarity clarifying and maintaining social boundaries |  
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