Tuesday, 11 February 2014

Exam I Review Materials


The format of Midterm I will follow what was discussed in lecture and in section. For further details, consult the hand-out that has been uploaded to bSpace and the blog.
In addition to the material covered in lecture and section, you should be familiar with the following readings for Exam I:
  1. Morrill, Calvin, Christine Yalda, Madelaine Adelman, Michael Musheno, and Cindy Bejarano. 2000. “Telling Tales in School: Youth Culture and Conflict Narratives.” Law & Society Review 34: 521-565.
  2. Case Summaries and Legal Terminology:
Ex Parte Crouse, 4 Whart. 9 (1839)
Commonwealth v. Fisher, 213 Pa. 48 (1905)
In re Gault, 387 U.S. 1 (1967)
McKeiver v. Pennsylvania, 403 U.S. 528 1976
Miller v. Alabama, 132 S. Ct. 2455 (2012)
People ex rel Gallo v. Acuna, 929 P.2d 597 (1997)
  1. Zimring, Franklin E., Rayman L. Solomon. 1996. “Goss v. Lopez: The Principle of the Thing – Bringing the Issue to Court”.  Pp. 459-490 in In the Interest of Children: Advocacy, Law Reform, and Public Policy, edited by Robert H. Mnookin.  NY: Freeman.
  2. Arum, Richard. 2003. “From the Bench to the Paddle” (with Richard Pitt and Jennifer Thompson).  Pp. 127-158 in Judging School Discipline: The Crisis of Moral Authority.  Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  3. Savage, John. 2007. “Hooligans and Apaches: Juvenile Delinquency and the Mass Media.” Pp. 33-48 in Teenage: The Prehistory of Youth Culture: 1875-1945.  NY: Penguin Books.
  4. Males, Mike. 1999. “Myth: The Media Tell the Truth about Youth.” Pp. 260-298 and 366-378 in Framing Youth: Ten Myths about the Next Generation.  Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press.


We will set time aside to review materials both in this Thursday’s (February 13th) lecture, and in the sections meeting this week. I am also making myself available throughout this week for individual or group appointments, if requested. Please sympathize with the fact that I have work of my own to complete, so I will do my best to meet with you when possible, although this will be subject to other constraints.
I’ve assembled a list of some of the ideas that we’ve gone over in lecture and in section. Note that this is not intended to be comprehensive – these are the key ideas, not all of the ideas we’ve covered. You should be familiar with them, and you should be able to apply them.
Don’t pay close attention to the sub-headings I’ve provided, or to whether something falls underneath one of those categories or another. They’re intentionally very loose, and things could easily be placed in a different category to the one I’ve selected. Perhaps a helpful review technique would involve you figuring out more appropriate groupings than what you see here.



The following is a list of concepts covered in the first few weeks of the semester.

Legal theory
Procedural justice
Substantive justice
Due process
habeas corpus
Parens patriae
Common law
Civil law
Proximal effects of law
Radial effects of law

Socio-legal analysis
Legal consciousness
Consciousness of conflict
Legal mobilization (formal-, quasi-, and extra-legal)
Court climate
Pro-school
Pro-student
Youth-centered perspective
Adult-centered perspective
Social space
Narrative
Liminality

Policy, Political & Empirical Patterns
Super-predator
Injunctions, and gang injunctions
Youth-as-empowered
Youth-as-consumers
Youth-as-not-quite-adults
Youth-as-objects-of-saving-and-study
Youth-as-rights-holders
Youth-as-dangerous-class
Youth-as-dependents
Youth-as-social-ideal
Youth-as-political-resource

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