| projects |
estimating the costs and benefits of the separate juvenile justice system
| The goal of the Research
Roundtable on Estimating the Costs and Benefits of the
Separate Juvenile Justice System was to assist the
MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Adolescent
Development and Juvenile Justice in examining the
feasibility of a cost-benefit analysis of the
nations separate system of juvenile laws and
juvenile courts. Arguments about the value of the separate juvenile justice system traditionally focus on ethical, moral, and legal principles, developmental differences between juveniles and adults, and the relative effectiveness of crime prevention and punishment. The Research Roundtable considered methods of adding an economic perspective to the debate. In other words, do the benefits of maintaining a separate legal system for young offenders outweigh the costs? What are those costs and benefits and can they be measured? The Roundtable, which included experts in adolescent development, juvenile justice, public policy, and economics, reviewed various approaches for analyzing this important policy question. The Urban Institute drew upon the views of Roundtable participants to prepare a white paper that described the feasibility of an economic analysis and proposed a possible research agenda for investigating the costs and benefits of the separate juvenile system. Members of the
Research Roundtable:
The Research Roundtable was commissioned by and sponsored by the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Adolescent Development and Juvenile Justice, directed by Dr. Laurence Steinberg of Temple University. Results from the project were available in 2005. |
project
staff |