Even as the number of females processed through juvenile courts climbs steadily, an implicit consensus remains among scholars in criminal justice that male adolescents define delinquency (1)______ problem in the United States. We suggest two reasons that this (2)______ view persists. First, female adolescents are accused primarily of victimless crime, such as truancy, that do not involve clear-cut (3)______ damage of persons or property. If committed by adults, these (4)______ actions are not even considered prosecutable; if committed by juvenile males, they have traditionally been looked over leniently (5)______ by the courts. Thus, ironically, the plight of female delinquencies (6)______ receives little scrutiny because they are accused of committing relatively minor offenses. Secondly, the courts have long justified (7)______ so-called preventive intervention into the lives of young females viewed as antisocial with the rationale women are especially (8)______ vulnerable. Traditional stereotypes of women for the weaker and (9)______ more independent sex have led to earlier intervention and longer (10)______ periods of misdirected supervision for female delinquents than for males.