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Articles

Making history for justice reform: Can the country end girls’ incarceration?

 

Abstract

Nationally, juvenile justice reforms have largely rolled back the surge in youth incarceration that resulted from the “tough on crime” era of the late 1990s and early 2000s: the numbers of young people arrested, detained, and placed in the justice system has fallen by half to the lowest numbers the country has seen since the 1980s. This paper analyzes gender-specific trends in juvenile justice involvement to assess whether declines in juvenile justice-involved youth population have made it possible to eliminate the practice of detaining or placing girls in juvenile justice facilities in many jurisdictions around the country. Descriptive data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics “Arrest Data Analysis Tool” as well as the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s “Easy Access to Juvenile Court Statistics” and “Census of Juveniles in Residential Placement” are compiled to provide an overview of gender demographics and charge severity at arrest and placement over time. Findings indicate that in many states girls numbers are sufficiently small and the severity of their offenses sufficiently low-level that targeted policy changes, diversion efforts, and investment community-based prevention and intervention programing could eliminate confinement altogether.

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