Children and Youth Services Review | 2019

Operationalizing intake: Variations in juvenile court intake procedures and their implications

 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Juvenile court intake – the process in which state or local authorities determine whether to prosecute, divert, or dismiss alleged juvenile delinquency cases – is essential to juvenile justice administration and to juvenile justice goals. Yet it is generally under-studied and the roles of prosecutors and intake officers poorly understood. This paper operationalizes juvenile court intake using data from one southeastern state, with a focus on professionals roles and relative power. Results demonstrate within-state variation in intake structures and procedures with regard to whether prosecutors or intake officers exert the greatest control. Further, results show that there is a geographic relationship to this variation – counties with heavy prosecutorial control are represented disproportionately among urban areas. Additional qualitative data offers insight into prosecutors and intake officers perspectives on each other s roles in intake. Findings indicate a range of questions to be explored in future research examining whether and how different intake structures affect intake decisions.

Volume 102
Pages 91-101
DOI 10.1016/J.CHILDYOUTH.2019.05.003
Language English
Journal Children and Youth Services Review

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