The Youth Criminal Justice Act is the law that governs Canada’s
youth justice system. It applies to youth who are at least 12 but under
18 years old, who are alleged to have committed criminal offences. In
over a century of youth justice legislation in Canada, there have been
three youth justice statutes: the Juvenile Delinquents Act (1908-1984), the Young Offenders Act (YOA) (1984-2003), and the Youth Criminal Justice Act (YCJA) (2003-present). A set of amendments to the YCJA was adopted by Parliament in 2012. The purpose of this document is to explain the background of the YCJA, to provide a summary of its main provisions and the rationale behind them, and to highlight the experience under the YCJA.
<span>Despite his personal opposition to slavery, when President Abraham Lincoln took office in 1861 he insisted that his constitutional duty was to keep the nation together, not to abolish slavery. He conducted the first year of the war with the goal of reuniting the Union, but wartime events, including heavy military losses and the many slaves who escaped behind Union battle lines, forced him to contend with the issue of slavery. He issued a preliminary Emancipation Proclamation on September 22, 1862 and the final version on January 1, 1863, fundamentally changing the meaning of the war.</span>
Answer:
C
Explanation:
It was the only document in 1776 calling for American independence. It pushed the United States to form a representative government.
The violation of common law and constitutional law was at the heart of the separation of the colonists from Great Britain's control.
Answer:
d: males between the ages of 17 and 60
Explanation:
its the only option with an age range that akes sense. 3 year olds dont read newspapers or anything really so option c is out and adults over 60 and females over 90 are most likely gonna be too old to participate in sports
hope this helps!!