Children's Rights in the United States: In Search of a National Policy

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The authors of this volume provide discussion on vital issues related to the rights of children in the United States, including: the historical and contextual perspective on the rights of children; the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child; the differing views on children's rights and competencies; and the rights of children within the family, the social service system, the health care system, the educational system, the juvenile justice system and in employment.

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Cuprins

A Historical
16
The United Nations Convention on
28
Perspectives on Childrens Rights
43
The Rights of Children
69
Recommendations Regarding the Rights of Children
101
The Rights of Children
140
Childrens Competence to Participate in Medical Decision
149
Childrens Rights in Mental Health Care
155
The Transfer to Adult Court
205
Children as Legal Witnesses
212
The Rights of Children in Employment
216
Children Are Persons
238
1334
257
Legal Cases Cited
260
62
264
Subject Index
269

Recommendations Regarding the Rights of Children
165
Do Children Have a Right to Be Educated?
173
Childrens Capacity to Make Decisions Regarding Their
191
The Juvenile Court After Gerald Gault
198
65
271
About the Authors
277
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Despre autor (1999)

Lawrence S. Wrightsman (Ph.D., University of Minnesota, 1959) was professor of psychology at the University of Kansas, Lawrence. Wrightsman authored or edited ten other books relevant to the legal system, including Psychology and the Legal System (4th edition, coauthored with Michael T. Nietzel and William H. Fortune), The American Jury on Trial (coauthored with Saul M. Kassin), and Judicial Decision Making: Is Psychology Relevant? He was invited to contribute the entry on the law and psychology for the recently published Encyclopedia of Psychology, sponsored by the American Psychological Association and published by Oxford University Press. His research topics included jury selection procedures, reactions to police interrogations, and the impact of judicial instructions. He also served as a trial consultant and testified as an expert witness. Wrightsman is a former president of both the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues and the Society of Personality and Social Psychology. In 1998 he was the recipient of a Distinguished Career Award from the American Psychology-Law Society. This award has been made on only six occasions in the 30-year history of the organization; the preceding awardee was U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun.

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