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Youth Workers in the Courts (From Perspectives in Professional Child and Youth Care, P 83-94, 1990, James P. Anglin, et. al., ed. -- See NCJ-125552)

NCJ Number
125557
Author(s)
S F McMain; C D Webster
Date Published
1990
Length
12 pages
Annotation
Numerous problems have arisen which to some extent threaten the credibility of youth court workers in the courtroom.
Abstract
Although mental health workers have long played an active and influential role in the provision of services to youth court, they have, as yet, devoted little effort to establishing standards to guide their procedures. The experiences of clinicians at the Metropolitan Toronto Forensic Service (METFORS) help in identifying some of the difficulties associated with current practices. The lack of specific standards which define the conduct of assessments has posed a number of problems which have brought mental health professionals into disrepute. In general, criticism has focused on the irrelevance of evidence to legal questions, the worth of legal and moral opinions proposed, the employment of data which are unreliable and invalid, and the use of jargon which is incomprehensible to legal decision makers. Before a proper assessment can be conducted the clinician must have a keen understanding of the reasons why the youth was referred for assessment. Opinions formulated from assessments and conveyed in reports should reflect a high degree of reliability and validity. Mental health professionals working in the juvenile justice system should be well informed about legal issues. 17 references. (Author abstract modified)