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  1. Youth justice in Germany covers juveniles and young adult offenders from 14 to 20 years of age. The legal approach since the enactment of a first Juvenile Justice Act (JJA) in 1923 has combined justice and welfare models. Major law reforms in 1953, 1990, and 2008 emphasized diversion and “educational” and restorative justice measures. The ...

  2. 19. Juni 2015 · And in both Germany and the U.S., there is a widespread recognition that young brains are different: they are less mentally culpable for their crimes, more open to rehabilitation, and more vulnerable to exploitation in the culture of prisons.

    • Maurice Chammah
  3. Germany provides a particularly notable model, as its responses to youth who break the law are centered entirely on rehabilitation, and it has included young adults in its juvenile justice system – rather than in its adult justice system – for more than half a century.

  4. Youth Justice in Germany criminals, juvenile immigrant offenders, and youth violence (particu-larly hate violence). The 1923 Youth Court Law exempted children up to the age of thir-teen from criminal responsibility. The range of criminal sanctions was expanded to include so-called educational measures besides prison sen-tences. Sentencing rules ...

  5. 1. Mai 2012 · Frieder Duenkel. University of Greifswald. Citations (6) References (53) Abstract. Youth justice in Germany covers juveniles and young adult offenders from 14 to 20 years of age. The legal...

  6. 25. März 2018 · Abstract. The victimoffender overlap is currently under discussion in criminology. However, the connection between victimization and offending over the life course still requires further investigation. The present study examines whether the victimoffender overlap is invariant during the transition from adolescence to early ...

  7. Three European nations – Croatia, Germany, and the Netherlands – allow youth over age 18 to be sanctioned in the same manner as younger youth in the juvenile justice sys-tem, including the possibility of being housed in juvenile facilities.