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Children. English law Children under 7 considered not to know right from wrong 7-14: presumption that they did not know right from wrong, but that could be overcome with evidence 14-18: presumption that they do know right from wrong, but could be overcome with evidence.
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Children • English law • Children under 7 considered not to know right from wrong • 7-14: presumption that they did not know right from wrong, but that could be overcome with evidence • 14-18: presumption that they do know right from wrong, but could be overcome with evidence
Attitudes toward children • Children were treated like adults • Same punishment, even death • Early codes recognized special needs such as guardianship, adoption, runaways • Harsh treatment • Protestant reformation: children wicked but worth saving
Factors influencing attitudes • Development of medical science: childhood mortality dropped • Birthrates dropped • Increased investment in children—they will live
Factors influencing attitudes • Industrial revolution: migration to cities • Increased difficulties in supervising children • Child labor • Eventually, pressure to reserve labor for adults (unions, child savers)
Attitudes toward children • Rise of education • Children removed from labor market • Increased emphasis on skills necessary for success in a technological society • Stratification of children by ages and separation from adults • Less options for youth other than education
Attitudes toward children • Rise of psychiatry, child psychology, and social work • Psychiatry: application of medical model to behavior—diagnosis, treatment and cure • Child psychology: discovery of differences in learning and processing, different developmental stages • Social work: dealing with social problems, rather than letting things happen
Attitudes toward children • Child savers • Jane Addams, Hull House in Chicago • Child savers usually middle to upper class, well-educated, often female • Wanted to help, protect and instill young people with proper values • Advocated child labor laws and compulsory education, emphasized children’s differences