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Cautioning Juvenile Offenders

NCJ Number
133578
Date Published
1988
Length
15 pages
Annotation
The police in the United Kingdom often address juvenile delinquency through the use of formal warnings rather than prosecution; this approach is consistent with research on youthful offenders and should be continued with appropriate monitoring and guidelines.
Abstract
Cautioning is used both to avoid the labeling that may lead to further criminality and to save police time and resources. It has its origins in the 1969 Children and Young Persons Act which aimed to divert as many juveniles as possible from entering the criminal justice system. As cautioning has become almost universally used, the issue of widening the net of social control has become a concern. Monitoring and evaluation should be central parts of the management and practice of cautioning. In addition, police should give parents clear explanations of the implications of the caution. They should also avoid using juvenile court proceedings as the means of involving welfare services in a family with problems and should monitor data so that net-widening and disparate approaches to cautioning do not persist. Tables, appended tables, and 16 references