Teen Rights (and Responsibilities)

Teen Rights (and Responsibilities)

Author: Traci Truly

Publisher: SphinxLegal

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 317

ISBN-13: 1572485256

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This comprehensive legal guide for teens covers everything from school dress codes to sexual harrassment to signing contracts.


Teen Legal Rights

Teen Legal Rights

Author: David L. Hudson Jr.

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Published: 2015-03-10

Total Pages: 366

ISBN-13: 1610697006

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The only book of its kind to examine all aspects of a young adult's legal rights at school, at work, and at home, including recent developments in teen-oriented legislation. Widespread Internet use and evolving privacy concerns compromise the legal rights of teenagers. While smart phones, social networking, and online music downloading pose new legal complications for teens and their parents to navigate, the Supreme Court has grappled with rights concerning every aspect of a young adult's life long before now. This newly updated text, written in accessible language and presented through an informal FAQ format, simplifies the laws, rights, and constitutional implications affecting young people today. In an easy-to-understand, non-intimidating style, First Amendment scholar David L. Hudson Jr. provides an authoritative analysis of the judicial system, utilizing actual court cases and legal arguments to help teens better understand their rights under the law. Additionally, the text presents recent changes and interpretations of legal areas still in debate. This third edition features an updated examination of recent topics that includes cyberbullying, "sexting," social media privacy, and illegal downloads of online content.


Teen Rights

Teen Rights

Author: Kathiann M. Kowalski

Publisher: Enslow Publishing

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 134

ISBN-13: 9780766012424

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Discusses the legal rights of teenagers in a variety of situations, such as health care decisions, school drug testing and discrimination, and using the Internet, and cites examples of court cases that deal with these issues.


Teen Rights

Teen Rights

Author: Traci Truly

Publisher: Sphinx Publishing

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 362

ISBN-13:

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Explains the duties, rights and responsibilities of today's teens in an easy-to-understand presentation


Teen Legal Rights

Teen Legal Rights

Author: David L. Hudson Jr.

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Published: 2024-06-13

Total Pages: 329

ISBN-13: 1440880301

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Teen legal rights are perpetually changing in American society, whether in the classroom, at work, or within family and community settings. Fully revised and updated to reflect important changes in the legal status and rights of young people from all walks of life, the fourth edition of Teen Legal Rights is an accessible and indispensable resource to help teenagers navigate and understand the extent and limitations of their rights and liberties. Employing a simple FAQ format organized into nearly two dozen topical chapters (including new chapters devoted to such subjects as immigration and trans youth), First Amendment scholar David L. Hudson Jr. provides an authoritative analysis of the judicial system as it pertains to teens and their interests, explaining important court decisions, legal arguments, and legislative changes to help teens better understand how their rights are evolving as they move deeper into the 2020s.


Teen Legal Rights

Teen Legal Rights

Author: David L. Hudson Jr.

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Published: 2024-06-13

Total Pages: 329

ISBN-13:

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Teen legal rights are perpetually changing in American society, whether in the classroom, at work, or within family and community settings. Fully revised and updated to reflect important changes in the legal status and rights of young people from all walks of life, the fourth edition of Teen Legal Rights is an accessible and indispensable resource to help teenagers navigate and understand the extent and limitations of their rights and liberties. Employing a simple FAQ format organized into nearly two dozen topical chapters (including new chapters devoted to such subjects as immigration and trans youth), First Amendment scholar David L. Hudson Jr. provides an authoritative analysis of the judicial system as it pertains to teens and their interests, explaining important court decisions, legal arguments, and legislative changes to help teens better understand how their rights are evolving as they move deeper into the 2020s.


Your Rights as an LGBTQ+ Teen

Your Rights as an LGBTQ+ Teen

Author: Barbra Penne

Publisher: The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc

Published: 2017-07-15

Total Pages: 66

ISBN-13: 1508174377

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Each chapter in this comprehensive title provides resources for teens encountering interpersonal or systemic mistreatment at home, school, work, and in their community. The text lays out their legally recognized rights in these contexts, providing information about how to make use of existing laws. Also included are strategies for meeting needs not currently recognized as legal rights, drawing on past and contemporary struggles for equality. Accessible and engaging, this title provides LGBTQ+ youth with the tools to protect themselves, participate safely in the activities they care about, and to make societal change.


Who Decides?

Who Decides?

Author: J. Shoshanna Ehrlich

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Published: 2006-04-30

Total Pages: 224

ISBN-13: 0313016283

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The question of whether a young woman should be allowed to terminate a pregnancy without her parents' knowledge has been one of the most contentious issues of the post Roe v. Wade era. Parental involvement laws reach to the core of the parent-teen relationship in the highly contested realm of adolescent sexuality. This is the first book to examine in thorough detail the decision-making experiences of teens considering abortion. Shoshanna Ehrlich evaluates the Supreme Court's efforts to reconcile the historically based understanding of teens as dependent persons in need of protection with a more contemporary understanding of them as autonomous individuals with adult-like claims to constitutional recognition. Arriving at a compromise, the Court has made clear that, like adult women, teens have a protected right of choice, but that states may impose a parental involvement requirement. However, so that parents are not vested with veto power over their daughters' decisions, young women must be allowed to seek a waiver of the requirement. Integrating a wealth of social science literature, including in-depth interviews with 26 young women from Massachusetts who obtained court authorization for an abortion, the book raises important questions about the logic of a legal approach that requires young women to involve adults when they seek to terminate a pregnancy, but that allows them to make a decision to become mothers on their own.