
Contents
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Girls' and Women's Involvement in Offending Girls' and Women's Involvement in Offending
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The Crime Wave that Didn't Happen The Crime Wave that Didn't Happen
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Trends in the Use of Court: The United States and Canada Trends in the Use of Court: The United States and Canada
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U.S. Court Trends U.S. Court Trends
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Canadian Court Trends Canadian Court Trends
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Concluding Remarks on Trends Concluding Remarks on Trends
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Summary Summary
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Conclusion Conclusion
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2 Are Sugar and Spice Really Evolving into Snips and Snails and Puppy-Dog Tails?
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Published:December 2009
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Abstract
This chapter examines the evidence related to the claim that girls are becoming more and more like boys in the nature and rate of their offending, and how the differences that exist in Canada and the United States translate into court processing. It asks whether the most salient data on “youth crime” — official court processing of youths — reflect the differences that we see in self-reported offending. The chapter first explores how girls and women are underrepresented as offenders, drawing on arrest data as well as self-reported offending. It then analyzes trends in estimates of the amount of crime apparently attributable to girls and boys, along with trends in the use of court for girls and boys. The data show that both girls and boys saw increases in the rate at which they were adjudicated delinquent in the United States from 1985 to 2004, whether one looks at all delinquency or minor assaults. In Canada, the rates of “all offenses,” “serious violence,” and “minor assaults” declined for boys but were stable for girls.
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