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14 Liverpool L. Rev. 3 (1992)

handle is hein.journals/lvplr14 and id is 1 raw text is: The Liverpool Law Review Vol. XIV(1) [19921 3

THE GOVERNMENT OF A GENERATION:
THE SUBJECT OF JUVENILE DELINQUENCY
Peter Rush
It is recorded on June 11, 1852 that a certain M M testified before a
Select Committee on Criminal and Destitute Juveniles. At mid-
century, the Committee was one of a long line of fact-gathering par-
liamentary committees the purpose of which were to investigate the
problems of the day. Witness after witness came before this partic-
ular Select Committee to testify to the existence of the problem of
juvenile delinquency and to suggest solutions. M M however is an
expert witness of a novel sort: an eighteen year old self-professed ju-
venile who had spent time at the Hardwicke Reformatory School
and who firmly advocates the necessity for the Reformatory School
and its efficiency in achieving a successful plan of correction. The
elliptical name of M M may thus stand as a figure in which is linked
the subjectification and subjection of juvenile delinquency. In any
case, M M stands before the Committee as the exemplary side of that
by now familiar figure of the juvenile delinquent. The other and
horrific side is the incorrigible juvenile. As Pasquale Pasquino has
remarked, the incorrigible child is one of the genealogical precursors
of the modern figure of the criminal.1 There have however been few
histories that have described the specificity of the figure of the
juvenile delinquent and the distinctiveness of the punitive
rationality within which it has an effectivity.2 It is such a
* Lecturer in Law, Department of Law, Lancaster University, Lancaster
LAl 4YF. Many colleagues have talked this project through with me.
Particular thanks to Gerry Johnstone for his close reading and discus-
sion of an earlier version, and to Peter Goodrich who pointed out the
chronographia to which the paper is prone.
1 P. Pasquino, Criminology: the birth of a special knowledge, in The
Foucault Effect (ed. G. Burchell et.al.), Harvester, 1991, 245.
2 The few histories of juvenile delinquency and its administration are: M.
May, Innocence and Experience: The Evolution of the Concept of Ju-
venile Delinquency in the Mid-Nineteenth Century, 17/1 Victorian
Studies (1973), 7-29; S. Magarey, The Invention of Juvenile Delinquen-
cy in Early Nineteenth-Century England, 34 Labour History (1978), 11-

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