|
|
|
Book Review
Christopher P. Manfredi, The Supreme Court and Juvenile
Justice, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1998. Pp. xv + 256.
$35.00 (ISBN 0-7006-0851-6).
|
In his engaging The Supreme Court and Juvenile Justice, political
scientist Christopher P. Manfredi argues that Americans in the 1990s
are still feeling the powerful and unintended consequences of a
trilogy of Supreme Court decisions, Kent v. United States
(1966), In re Gault (1967), and In re Winship (1970).
In Gault, the most famous of these cases, Justice Abe Fortas
announced that it was time for the "constitutional domestication"
of the nation's juvenile courts and began this process by extending
limited due process protection to offenders during adjudicatory
hearings. Fortas believed that these protections would shield juveniles
from unlimited judicial discretion, while still retaining the juvenile
court's founding ideals of individualized treatment and rehabilitation
that were embodied in the legal concept of parens patriae
(the state as father/parent). Manfredi, however, claims that
constitutional domestication instead undermined "the traditional
assumptions of juvenile justice policy" and "facilitated legislative
reform by unclogging the channels of political change" (176). Once
under way, this reform process led to the criminalization of juvenile
justice and the establishment of individual responsibility and retribution
as its new twin ideals. Thus, Manfredi concludes that even court-ordered
reform of a legal system, an area in which judges are experts, can
be a risky business. |
1
|
|
It should come as no surprise
that The Supreme Court and Juvenile Justice primarily builds
upon the social scientific literature concerned with litigation
and social reform that stresses the shortcomings of courts to enact
meaningful social change, including such influential works as Donald
Horowitz's The Courts and Social Policy (1977) and Gerald
Rosenberg's The Hollow Hope: Can Courts Bring About Social Change?
(1991). Manfredi's first chapter on litigation and the dynamics
of social reform, in fact, will serve as a good primer for readers,
especially historians, unfamiliar with this growing body of scholarship.
Particularly useful are his concise discussions of models of twentieth-century
public interest litigation, epitomized by the strategies developed
by the NAACP and ACLU, as well as his overview of "the nationalization
of criminal procedure" by the Warren Court. |
2
|
|
After constructing a solid theoretical
foundation, Manfredi then lays out a compelling narrative of the
rise and fall of the rehabilitative ideal in juvenile justice, which
had legitimated the creation of specialized courts to hear the cases
of dependent, neglected, and delinquent children. This ideal had
also helped to shield juvenile courts from legal and political challenges,
especially during the early twentieth century. He traces the origins
of the rehabilitative ideal to the House of Refuge movement in the
1820s, finds its embodiment in the Illinois Juvenile Court Act of
1899, and dates its fall from grace to changing social conditions
in the post-World War II era. His sketch of public perceptions of
delinquency and the role of children in twentieth-century society
is thin. Yet, he does provide a rewarding account of how postwar
legal scholars and social scientists began to question the paternal
assumptions of traditional juvenile justice. He concludes this part
of the narrative with a 1964 speech delivered by Chief Justice Earl
Warren to the National Council of Juvenile Court Judges. In this
speech, Warren warned the judges that the Supreme Court would no
longer tolerate their vast discretion over children in the name
of parens patriae. |
3
|
|
This historical overview
of juvenile justice beautifully sets up the heart of his book, four
chapters of insider's history complemented by extremely close readings
of the briefs and opinions in the trilogy of cases that transformed
American juvenile justice. Manfredi lucidly explains difficult legal
concepts and, more importantly, reveals their significance. His
analysis, for example, of the shifting rationale for these decisions
from "selective incorporation" of the Bill of Rights to "fundamental
fairness" is enlightening. Moreover, a series of tables and charts
helps to untangle legal concepts as well as the scholarship brought
to the court through amicus briefs. His minute attention to legal
detail, for example, also reveals that Gault, which is best
known as a children's rights case and is even the subject of a recent
book for young adults, actually began in the Arizona courts as a
parental rights case. This significant transformation suggests that
scholars must be extremely careful when writing the history of children's
rights not to forget how often parental rights are also involved
in these cases. In addition, his findings also suggest that Gault
has become a lens that distorts our readings of earlier decisions.
|
4
|
|
The final two chapters of this first-rate
monograph sketch out the unintended consequences of constitutional
domestication and provide a good summary of the wave of legislative
activity that has "criminalized" juvenile justice and the scholarly
assessment of this national trend. Although The Supreme Court
and Juvenile Justice clearly has a great deal to offer specialists
in juvenile justice, it should also interest scholars concerned
more generally with twentieth-century law and governance because
it helps to explain the unraveling of Progressive Era assumptions
about state power and social welfare. |
5
|
|
|
David S. Tanenhaus
|
|
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
|
|
Content in the History Cooperative database is intended for
personal, noncommercial use only. You may not reproduce,
publish, distribute, transmit, participate in the transfer or
sale of, modify, create derivative works from, display, or in any
way exploit the History Cooperative database in whole or in part
without the written permission of the copyright holder.
|