What is the BARJ model for juvenile justice and how does it work?
What will be an ideal response?
• With neither rehabilitation nor juvenile accountability proving to be effective in dealing with juvenile drug crime, a blending of both into a balanced and restorative justice (BARJ) perspective has emerged. In many ways, the BARJ approach is similar to that used in adult drug courts. BARJ emphasizes collaborative (rather than adversarial) efforts by all parties within the juvenile justice system to focus on the outcome of reducing juveniles' substance abuse and criminal involvement. The model is multidimensional in that it uses treatment, punishment, and psychological, social, and cultural factors to work toward freedom from drugs for juveniles.
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Hill (2000), following Kant, argues that use of force in self-defense against opposing force:
a. Shows a lack of human respect for the attacker. b. Is a selfish, immoral act. c. violates Kant’s second categorical imperative d. Is moral, and a right and responsibility.
Bias-based policing is also known as _____ profiling
Fill in the blank(s) with correct word
_____ deterrence occurs when members of the public decide not to break the law because they fear legal punishment
Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).
As a result of ______ activism and the social activism of the late 1960s, many inmates, especially minorities, were provided with a political rhetoric and ideology that radicalized prisons.
a. judicial b. prosecutorial c. inmate d. celebrity