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Calvert, Sandra L. – Future of Children, 2008
Marketing and advertising support the U.S. economy by promoting the sale of goods and services to consumers, both adults and children. Sandra Calvert addresses product marketing to children and shows that although marketers have targeted children for decades, two recent trends have increased their interest in child consumers. First, both the…
Descriptors: Advertising, Video Games, Audiences, Marketing
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Jordan, Amy B. – Future of Children, 2008
Amy Jordan addresses the need to balance the media industry's potentially important contributions to the healthy development of America's children against the consequences of excessive and age-inappropriate media exposure. Much of the philosophical tension regarding how much say the government should have about media content and delivery stems…
Descriptors: Video Games, Industry, Freedom of Speech, Federal Regulation
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Scott, Elizabeth S.; Steinberg, Laurence – Future of Children, 2008
Elizabeth Scott and Laurence Steinberg explore the dramatic changes in the law's conception of young offenders between the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twenty-first. At the dawn of the juvenile court era, they note, most youths were tried and punished as if they were adults. Early juvenile court reformers argued strongly…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Maturity (Individuals), Violence, Crime
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Mulvey, Edward P.; Iselin, Anne-Marie R. – Future of Children, 2008
The dual requirement to ensure community safety and promote a youthful offender's positive development permeates policy and frames daily practice in juvenile justice. Balancing those two demands, explain Edward Mulvey and Anne-Marie Iselin, requires justice system professionals at all levels to make extremely difficult decisions about the likely…
Descriptors: Juvenile Courts, Adolescents, Computers, Juvenile Justice
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Piquero, Alex R. – Future of Children, 2008
For many years, notes Alex Piquero, youth of color have been overrepresented at every stage of the U.S. juvenile justice system. As with racial disparities in a wide variety of social indicators, the causes of these disparities are not immediately apparent. Some analysts attribute the disparities to "differential involvement"--that is, to…
Descriptors: Social Control, Disproportionate Representation, Social Indicators, Juvenile Justice
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Fagan, Jeffrey – Future of Children, 2008
Rising juvenile crime rates during the 1970s and 1980s spurred state legislatures across the country to exclude or transfer a significant share of offenders under the age of eighteen to the jurisdiction of the criminal court, essentially redrawing the boundary between the juvenile and adult justice systems. Jeffrey Fagan examines the legal…
Descriptors: Judges, Adolescent Development, Crime, State Legislation
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Cauffman, Elizabeth – Future of Children, 2008
Although boys engage in more delinquent and criminal acts than do girls, female delinquency is on the rise. In 1980, boys were four times as likely as girls to be arrested; today they are only twice as likely to be arrested. In this article, the author explores how the juvenile justice system is and should be responding to the adolescent female…
Descriptors: Delinquency, Females, Juvenile Justice, Criminals
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Grisso, Thomas – Future of Children, 2008
In this paper, the author points out that youth with mental disorders make up a significant subgroup of youth who appear in U.S. juvenile courts. And he notes that juvenile justice systems today are struggling to determine how best to respond to those youths' needs, both to safeguard their own welfare and to reduce re-offending and its…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Health Services, Aggression, At Risk Persons
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Chassin, Laurie – Future of Children, 2008
Laurie Chassin focuses on the elevated prevalence of substance use disorders among young offenders in the juvenile justice system and on efforts by the justice system to provide treatment for these disorders. She emphasizes the importance of diagnosing and treating these disorders, which are linked both with continued offending and with a broad…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Chronic Illness, Risk, Juvenile Justice
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Greenwood, Peter – Future of Children, 2008
Over the past decade researchers have identified intervention strategies and program models that reduce delinquency and promote pro-social development. Preventing delinquency, says Peter Greenwood, not only saves young lives from being wasted, but also prevents the onset of adult criminal careers and thus reduces the burden of crime on its victims…
Descriptors: Intervention, Delinquency, Social Behavior, Correctional Institutions
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Duncan, Greg J.; Ludwig, Jens; Magnuson, Katherine A. – Future of Children, 2007
Greg Duncan, Jens Ludwig, and Katherine Magnuson explain how providing high-quality care to disadvantaged preschool children can help reduce poverty. In early childhood, they note, children's cognitive and socioemotional skills develop rapidly and are sensitive to "inputs" from parents, home learning environments, child care settings, and the…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Public Policy, Early Childhood Education, Preschool Children
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Berlin, Gordon L. – Future of Children, 2007
Gordon Berlin discusses the nation's long struggle to reduce poverty in families with children, and proposes a counterintuitive solution--rewarding the work of individuals. He notes that policymakers' difficulty in reducing family poverty since 1973 is attributable to two intertwined problems--falling wages among low-skilled workers and the…
Descriptors: Wages, Poverty, Taxes, Tax Credits
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Mead, Lawrence M. – Future of Children, 2007
Lawrence Mead addresses the problem of nonwork among low-income men, particularly low-income black men, and its implications for families and children. The poor work effort, he says, appears to be caused partly by falling wages and other opportunity constraints but principally by an oppositional culture and a breakdown of work discipline. Mead…
Descriptors: Wages, Employment, Correctional Institutions, Economically Disadvantaged
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Greenberg, Mark – Future of Children, 2007
In Mark Greenberg's view, a national child care strategy should pursue four goals. Every parent who needs child care to get or keep work should be able to afford care without having to leave children in unhealthy or dangerous environments; all families should be able to place their children in settings that foster education and healthy…
Descriptors: Poverty, Family Income, Tax Credits, Federal Government
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Amato, Paul R.; Maynard, Rebecca A. – Future of Children, 2007
Since the 1970s, the share of U.S. children growing up in single-parent families has doubled, a trend that has disproportionately affected disadvantaged families. Paul Amato and Rebecca Maynard argue that reversing that trend would reduce poverty in the short term and, perhaps more important, improve children's growth and development over the long…
Descriptors: Divorce, Sex Education, Poverty, Marital Satisfaction
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