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Juvenile Justice Training Needs Assessment: A Survey of Law Enforcement
Juvenile Justice Training Needs Assessment: A Survey of Law Enforcement
Publication year:
2011
| Cataloged on:
Sep. 22, 2011
ANNOTATION: Findings from the Juvenile Justice Training Needs Assessment Survey “identify challenges and training needs facing law enforcement in addressing juvenile crime, delinquency and victimization” (p. 3). Four sections follow an executive summary—introduction, methodology, results, and conclusion. Results are organized according to: survey population and agency type; juvenile justice operations—staffing and funding and policy and procedure; training—budget, recipients, and methods; and training needs—most pressing juvenile justice/youth issues, most pressing issues for rural, urban, and suburban agencies, and by agency size. The most pressing issues involve substance abuse, abuse, juvenile repeat offenders, bullying/cyberbullying, gangs, Internet crimes involving juveniles of youth (as perpetrator or victim), runaways, and school safety.
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