Volume 56, Issue 4 Juvenile Justice Reform in New York
Distinguished legal, criminal justice, and social science scholars, attorneys, and judges examine all phases of New York’s juvenile justice system, from police-youth interactions through post-adjudication detention and alternatives, based on a symposium held at New York Law School in April 2011 and sponsored by the Diane Abbey Law Center for Children and Families.Articles
Foreword: The Past, Present, and Future of Juvenile Justice Reform in New York State
Stephen A. Newman
Juvenile Justice Reform: Now Is the Moment
Judith S. Kaye
Reflections on Juvenile Justice Reform in New York
Jeremy Travis
Growing Up Policed in the Age of Aggressive Policing Policies
Brett G. Stoudt, Michelle Fine, and Madeline Fox
Judging Children as Children: Reclaiming New York’s Progressive Tradition
Michael A. Corriero
When the Cure Makes You Ill: Seven Core Principles to Change the Course of Youth Justice
Gabrielle Prisco
Notes
Coming Clean: The Erosion of Juvenile Miranda Rights in New York State
Justin Ashenfelter
Regulation LLC
Raymond P. Girnys
Turning the Lights On: An Analysis of the Fiduciary Duty Provisions of the New York State Public Authority Reform Act
Adam Paul Gordon
Case Comments
SEC v. Byers
David M. Brown
Bouchat v. Baltimore Ravens Ltd. Partnership
John Imhoff
People v. Givenni
Colette Siesholtz