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Juvenile Justice System: Nurse Practitioner

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Juvenile Justice System
Dina always wanted to become a Nurse Practitioner and has worked very hard to achieve her goal. But, Dina’s juvenile record has prevented her from fulfilling that dream. When Dina was 12 years old, her parents divorced, and she moved with her mother and siblings from their suburban home and into Section 8 housing. She immediately took on greater responsibilities, including caring for her younger siblings, acting as an interpreter for her mother who was a Haitian immigrant, and completing the family’s public benefits applications. She even obtained her first job at age 13. Like many youth, Dina responded to the added pressure by acting out. That year, she was arrested for a fight in school. By age 15, she had been adjudicated …show more content…

This system was to differ from adult or criminal court in a number of ways. It was to focus on the child or adolescent as a person in need of assistance, not on the act that brought him or her before the court. Youths are treated differently for many reasons. First of all, a human brain is not fully developed until the age of 25. In early teenage years, the brain can communicate like an adult, form and discuss complicated ideas, use language in increasingly complex ways, and will often perceive several levels of communication. While teens’ brains are developed in many areas, the frontal lobe is the last place to develop. The frontal lobe controls judgement and self-control, and is not fully developed until a person’s mid-20s. This is the reason for encouraged rehabilitation. The teen brain still has time to be influenced into making better decisions. Teens whose cases stay in juvenile court are treated differently than their counterparts who enter the adult justice system, based on the recognition that the adolescent brain is different from the adult brain and that kids might lack the intellectual or moral capacity to understand the consequences of their actions, experts say. For example, while adult cases can drag on for years, juvenile court proceedings tend to move more quickly in …show more content…

News studies show a number of serious crimes being committed by children and adolescents. Criminologists' see warnings of vicious juveniles with general belief that young people are increasingly violent and uncontrollable and that the response of the juvenile justice system has been inadequate. Reacting to evidence of increases in juvenile violence, state and federal legislators have proposed, and most states have passed, laws that make the juvenile system more punitive and that allow younger children and adolescents to be transferred to the adult system for a greater variety of offenses and in a greater variety of

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