Reform the juvenile justice system

The juvenile justice system in this country is badly in need of repair. As Casey Foundation President Douglas W. Nelson notes in the 2008 KIDS COUNT Data Book essay, "Among all the policy areas affecting vulnerable children and families, juvenile justice has probably suffered the most glaring gaps between best practice and common practice." With its punitive approach and overreliance on detention for troubled youth, the system is "shaped by misinformation, hyperbole, and political prejudices."

Scholars, advocates, and practitioners have amassed a body of evidence on what has and hasn't worked in combating delinquency over the past 20 years—and on steps needed to spur reform. A key contributor has been the Casey Foundation's Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative (JDAI), which has shown that jurisdictions can safely reduce reliance on secure detention while also reducing the glaring overrepresentation of young people of color in the system. The core principles of JDAI and its proven interventions are being replicated in more than 100 jurisdictions nationwide.

"Given what we now know and in light of the terrible costs of retaining the status quo in juvenile justice, there remains no reasonable excuse for inaction," Nelson notes.

While many aspects of juvenile justice reform must be state and locally driven, the federal government can play a crucial role as a catalyst for change and constructive new approaches.

The federal Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act needs to be reauthorized with enhanced provisions to reduce racial disparities, strengthen core protections against confining status offenders and mingling juveniles with adult offenders, and improve conditions of confinement when young people are confined.

"Many states and localities lack financial resources and technical know-how," says Bart Lubow, the Casey Foundation's director of Programs for High-Risk Youth. "They look to the federal government for guidance on how best to tackle juvenile justice challenges." To fulfill this role, the government should:

Better Data: To fill gaps in detailed and reliable information about delinquency programming, the U.S. Department of Justice should establish a national data system for juvenile justice and boost research and dissemination efforts to promote best practices.