Description
Book SynopsisThis groundbreaking study goes inside France's juvenile court system and follows young people, largely of foreign ancestry, from arrest to court trials, revealing an alarming shift in the nation's approach to its youth offenders.
Trade Review"
Judging Muhammad illuminates new ways of understanding youth. The book reveals the enormous impact changes in contemporary French society are having on the lives of young people and their families." -- Deborah Durham * Sweet Briar College *
"This in-depth study will help those who wish to understand more completely the French juvenile justice system and how it differs from its American counterpart . . . For those interested in youth violence, urban and
banlieue riots, and the children of immigrant and migrant populations in France today,
Judging Mohammed will shed light on how the youth of these minority populations are treated and, more accurately, judged in the Palace of Justice's juvenile court." -- Rosalie Vermette *
French Review *
"How a key institution struggles against vast social changes, most of which are out of its control, but for which its responsibility is widely accpeted, is the question anthropologist Terrio tackles in her excellent book." --
CHOICE"The international notice garnered by the 2005 suburban riots drew to attention the deep racial tensions in France and simultaneously provides a useful frame for Susan Terrio's project of understanding juvenile courts as a site of conflict between the dominant social order—particularly the ideological and cultural biases of 'French identity'—and the racial, religious, and ethnic diversity of contemporary France . . .
Judging Mohammed's exploratory, anthropological study of Parisian juvenile courts offers readers an insightful journey through the juvenile justice system, with particular interest for those interested in comparative judicial studies or race relations in France." --
Law and Politics Book Review"Terrio's honest look at juvenile delinquency in France appears at an exceptionally important moment, both in France and globally.
Judging Muhammad illustrates how a form of cultural racism has been incorporated into the French courtroom, penalizing the most marginal citizens. It is an excellent, timely, and insightful work." -- Miriam Ticktin * The New School *
"This compelling, clear account speaks directly from the French case to current debates about how far we wish to penalize juvenile behavior, and does so based on first-hand study of judges and courts in France. Terrio's book sets a new standard for analytically sharp and ethnographically rich studies of judging in European societies." -- John Bowen * Washington University in St. Louis *
"[
Judging Mohammed is] a well-researched and deeply instructive account of the processes of investigation, prosecution, and decision-making in cases brought against youths . . . Terrio's book is an important contribution not only to the literature on juvenile justice systems, but also to the literature on the challenges faced by nation-states such as France whose core values and principles imperfectly meet the changing needs of its citizens." -- Katherine C. Donahue
Table of ContentsContents Acknowledgments Prologue 1 Are They All Delinquents? 2 The French Criminal Justice System 3 New Savages in the City? Historical and Contemporary Representations of Juvenile Delinquency 4 Justice for Minors: A Minor Justice? 5 Getting Arrested and Going to Court 6 Rendering Justice in Chambers 7 Judging Delinquents in the Juvenile Court 8 New Barbarians at the Gates of Paris? The Problem of Undocumented Minors 9 Conclusion Notes References Index