This article examines critically the persistently antagonistic relationship – across the past quarter-century – between the provisions of international human rights instruments and the nature and direction of youth justice reform in England and Wales. It introduces the core provisions of the human rights framework that pertain to youth justice and it sketches the nature and direction of policy reform over the 25-year period under scrutiny (1991–2016). To obtain a comprehensive sense of the relationship between human rights and youth justice reform in the jurisdiction, it applies a detailed systemic analysis; beginning at the point at which criminal responsibility is formally imputed and progressing through each stage of the youth justice sy...
There have been a number of attempts to elaborate 'models' and typologies of youth justice, which ar...
The adoption of the UNCRC in 1989 and its ratification by the UK government two years later came at ...
The main aim of this article is to provoke a debate about the ways in which state responses to youth...
This article examines critically the persistently antagonistic relationship – across the past quarte...
© The Author(s) 2017. This article examines critically the persistently antagonistic relationship – ...
Open Access articleA combination of international children's rights instruments and regional human r...
The youth justice system in England and Wales has repeatedly been criticised for its treatment of ch...
Derived from a more ambitious international youth justice research project, this article aims to cri...
Separate systems of justice for children and young people have always been beset by issues of contra...
This article considers whether the system of reprimands and final warnings in the youth justice syst...
How and why does youth justice change? This article examines the nature and foci of change in youth ...
The Committee on the Rights of the Child (see CRC, 2007) monitors the extent to which youth justice ...
This article reviews the current state of play in youth justice, taking particular note of the rheto...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Youth justice under the Coalition government in England and Wales has been characterised by consider...
There have been a number of attempts to elaborate 'models' and typologies of youth justice, which ar...
The adoption of the UNCRC in 1989 and its ratification by the UK government two years later came at ...
The main aim of this article is to provoke a debate about the ways in which state responses to youth...
This article examines critically the persistently antagonistic relationship – across the past quarte...
© The Author(s) 2017. This article examines critically the persistently antagonistic relationship – ...
Open Access articleA combination of international children's rights instruments and regional human r...
The youth justice system in England and Wales has repeatedly been criticised for its treatment of ch...
Derived from a more ambitious international youth justice research project, this article aims to cri...
Separate systems of justice for children and young people have always been beset by issues of contra...
This article considers whether the system of reprimands and final warnings in the youth justice syst...
How and why does youth justice change? This article examines the nature and foci of change in youth ...
The Committee on the Rights of the Child (see CRC, 2007) monitors the extent to which youth justice ...
This article reviews the current state of play in youth justice, taking particular note of the rheto...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Youth justice under the Coalition government in England and Wales has been characterised by consider...
There have been a number of attempts to elaborate 'models' and typologies of youth justice, which ar...
The adoption of the UNCRC in 1989 and its ratification by the UK government two years later came at ...
The main aim of this article is to provoke a debate about the ways in which state responses to youth...