“…Serious juvenile offenders were considered to be more sophisticated, diminishing the idea that youth must be treated differently in a separate justice system (Bishop, 2000;Feld, 1999a;Singer, 1996). Laws in many states were changed during the 1970s and 1980s to focus on the "just desserts" of the offender, highlighting punishment for the current offense rather than treatment of the real needs of the child (Ainsworth, 1991;Feld, 1993Feld, , 1998Feld, , 1999a. Increases in crime and the fear of crime combined with the emphasis on formal legal proceedings for juveniles resulted in increased punitiveness for serious crimes but a concurrent reduction in punitiveness for noncriminal, or status, offenses.…”