UNDERSTANDING PUBLIC VIEWS OF YOUTH CRIME AND THE YOUTH JUSTICE SYSTEM

Authors
Citation
Jb. Sprott, UNDERSTANDING PUBLIC VIEWS OF YOUTH CRIME AND THE YOUTH JUSTICE SYSTEM, Canadian journal of criminology, 38(3), 1996, pp. 271-290
Citations number
10
Categorie Soggetti
Criminology & Penology
ISSN journal
07049722
Volume
38
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
271 - 290
Database
ISI
SICI code
0704-9722(1996)38:3<271:UPVOYC>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
Most (94%) of the stories about youth crime appearing in a sample of T oronto newspapers involved cases of violence. Youth court statistics, in contrast, showed that fewer than a quarter of youth court cases in Ontario involved violence. The newspapers focused largely on the crime , the charge laid against the young person, and the impact of the crim e on victims. Legal reports of youth court dispositions, on the other hand, focused more on characteristics of the youth. Although readers o f Toronto newspapers receive almost no information about youth court d ispositions, a survey of Toronto residents demonstrated that most peop le believe that youth court dispositions are too lenient. When asked t o indicate what kinds of cases they were thinking of, most of those wh o thought that youth court dispositions were too lenient were thinking of a minority of cases: those involving serious violent repeat offend ers. Respondents also had very little accurate knowledge of the operat ion of the youth court in Canada, underestimating the severity of disp ositions available to the court under the law. They also believed that the courts were much more constrained than they are in their ability to transfer cases to adult court. The view that youth courts are too l enient can best be thought of as a general ''belief'', more linked to general views about crime and the criminal justice system than it is t o knowledge or facts about youth crime and the youth justice system.