Courtroom Discussion on Child's Cognitive Capacity and Law

The Legal Foundations and Implications of the Age of Reason

In most jurisdictions, the “age of reason” is the minimum age—often set around 7 to 14—at which a child can be presumed capable of criminal intent. It shapes whether juvenile conduct is treated as delinquency, a need for services, or potentially a criminal matter, and the threshold varies widely by state and country. This article […]

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