US Office of Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Sanction
A penalty for noncompliance; an effective juvenile justice system includes a complete array of sanctions, from the least to the most intrusive.
Secure Detention
Temporary locked confinement for (1) youth awaiting adjudication or placement or (2) for youth ordered to youth corrections as a sentence for contempt of court; in the adult correctional system, this is analogous to jail. In NH, this is the Youth Services Detention Unit (YDSU) located in Concord.
Secure Facilities
Long-term locked confinement typically reserved for the most serious and habitual offenders; youth receive education, care, supervision, and treatment and are required to confront their criminal thinking and antisocial behavior. In the adult correctional system, this is analogous to prison. In NH, this is the Youth Detention Center (YDC) in Manchester.
Self-assessment tool
An instrument used by an entity to evaluate itself at a specific point in time.
Service
Work done by an entity to improve the well-being of others.
Service delivery system
The manner in which programs, services, and supports are accessible, comprehensive, integrated, culturally-sensitive, family-focused, school-linked, and neighborhood-based.
Service integration
A process by which public and private education, health, mental health, economic development, employment, and social services are delivered in a unified way to improve results for targeted populations.
Shelter Care
The temporary care of youth in facilities secured by staff and typically serving dependent, abused, or neglected youth and status offenders.
Skill Development
A program that develops social, career, life, and educational skills.
Social control theory
This model, based on the integration of social control and cultural learning theories, proposes that the development of attachments to parents will lead to attachments to school and a commitment to education as well as a belief in and commitment to conventional behavior and the law.
Social development model
This model, based on the integration of social control and cultural learning theories, proposes that the development of attachments to parents will lead to attachments to school and a commitment to education as well as a belief in and commitment to conventional behavior and the law.
Social process theories
These theories examine the interactions between individuals and their environments that influence them to become involved in delinquent behavior.
Social structure theories
These theories suggest that the setting for delinquency is the social and cultural environment in which adolescents grown up or the sub-cultural groups with which they choose to become involved.
Sociopath
One suffering from serious emotional disorders with aggressive asocial behaviors; children who exhibit these traits frequently become hard-core juvenile delinquents.
Source of referral
The agency or individual filing a complaint that initiates court proceedings including: town and city police officers, state police, sheriffs, appointed prosecutors, and civilians such as the youth's own parents or legal guardians, school staff, social agencies victims, and other private citizens.
Stakeholder
Those who have with an interest in the program and its evaluation (e.g., participants, funders, managers etc.) A person or entity with an interest in the outcomes.
Start-Up Grant
A grant to cover the costs of starting a new project or organization.
Status offenses
Non-criminal behavior that is considered an offense only when committed by a juvenile because of their status as minors; offenses include being truant from school, running away from home, not obeying the reasonable expectations of parents, or violating curfew; also know as CHINS offenses.
Strategy
A course of action; something one does to put principles into practice, in the case of substance abuse prevention: information dissemination, education, earlyintervention, social policy/environmental change, etc.
Support
Activities informally done to improve the well-being of others.
Suspicion
No specific offense; suspect released without formal charges being placed.
Systems reform
Strategies that change the way services are delivered, financed, and governed, and that change accountability for the outcomes.
The provision of specific expertise to meet a specific need.
Tracking
An intensive level of supervision offered by a private organization or agency
Training
The transferring of knowledge, skills, and understanding
Treatment
A therapeutic program conducted by a professional individual or agency.
A temporary or permanent termination of parental rights in the best interests of the child; usually given for reasons of abandonment, abuse, or neglect, but also including mental illness, addiction, or criminal record. Law prohibits poverty alone and character flaws from being indicators of "unfitness".
Uniform Crime Reports
The Federal Bureau of Investigation's annual report of crimes committed in the United States.
Unrestricted Grant
A grant awarded to further the purpose or work of an organization rather than for a specific project; also called a General Operating Support Grant.
Upper Age
The age beyond which the juvenile offenders are handled through the juvenile justice system; the upper age in NH is now 17; however, this age may be returned to 18 pending legislation in Concord
An investment in a new initiative or project that is intended to obtain other investments.
Venue
The geographic location where a court with jurisdiction may hear a case; delinquency petitions may be filed in the city or county where the offense occurred instead of in the home community of the youth
Violent crime
Crimes including murder, forcible rape, armed robbery, robbery, and aggravated assault
Vision
A shared picture of the future an entity seeks to create.
VOCA
Victims of Crime Act
A court action "certifying" the youth as eligible for trial as an adult because rehabilitation appears unlikely or because the crime was particularly atrocious
Wrap-Around Services
Adjunct services that have been added to provide additional benefits to youth i.e. psychotherapy, skills development services, and psychological testing; implies a presence of collaboration that will result in better services to the child and family and an optimal use of resources
A 108-bed co-educational secure correction facility located in Manchester, NH and serving as the secure correction facility for adjudicated juveniles in New Hampshire who have committed serious offenses.
Youth Detention Services Unit (YDSU)
A 23-bed, co-educational, secure detention facility located in Concord, NH and housing youth up to 17 years of age who are alleged to have committed delinquent offenses and are awaiting disposition of their cases by the sending courts.
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