Over the past two decades, the number of young people in youth prisons in United States has quietly declined by two-thirds. As it has done so, youth crime has continued to plummet nationally and in individual states with large declines in youth incarceration. Is this a signal that America can do without youth prisons at all? And, if so, what should we replace them with
The pace of juvenile justice reform is accelerating across the nation. After a decade shaped by myth...
Elizabeth Scott and Laurence Steinberg explore the dramatic changes in the law’s conception of young...
The History of juvenile justice started out to be something that would help juveniles grow into bein...
America's longstanding youth prison model, which emphasizes confinement and control, exacerbates you...
Youth incarceration rates have changed dramatically over the past 10 years . Following two decades o...
The juvenile court system should be abolished and all juvenile offenders should be integrated into t...
The juvenile justice system is beset by major societal forces and does not lack for critics. Several...
America appears to be in the midst of a crisis of violence among the nation's youth that requires th...
The U.S. juvenile justice system has relied far too heavily on incarceration, for far too long. The ...
Each year, hundreds of thousands of vulnerable young people, primarily youth of color, are funneled ...
Juvenile justice policies in New York State put adolescents at risk for experiencing trauma in the c...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Active and targeted reforms at the local and state levels have had success reducing youth incarcerat...
The prevalence of crime has been of great concern to policymakers for decades, with many factors bei...
This policy brief looks at the consequences of detention on young people, their families, and commun...
The pace of juvenile justice reform is accelerating across the nation. After a decade shaped by myth...
Elizabeth Scott and Laurence Steinberg explore the dramatic changes in the law’s conception of young...
The History of juvenile justice started out to be something that would help juveniles grow into bein...
America's longstanding youth prison model, which emphasizes confinement and control, exacerbates you...
Youth incarceration rates have changed dramatically over the past 10 years . Following two decades o...
The juvenile court system should be abolished and all juvenile offenders should be integrated into t...
The juvenile justice system is beset by major societal forces and does not lack for critics. Several...
America appears to be in the midst of a crisis of violence among the nation's youth that requires th...
The U.S. juvenile justice system has relied far too heavily on incarceration, for far too long. The ...
Each year, hundreds of thousands of vulnerable young people, primarily youth of color, are funneled ...
Juvenile justice policies in New York State put adolescents at risk for experiencing trauma in the c...
Underlying the juvenile court system are two competing philosophies of justice which have taken pred...
Active and targeted reforms at the local and state levels have had success reducing youth incarcerat...
The prevalence of crime has been of great concern to policymakers for decades, with many factors bei...
This policy brief looks at the consequences of detention on young people, their families, and commun...
The pace of juvenile justice reform is accelerating across the nation. After a decade shaped by myth...
Elizabeth Scott and Laurence Steinberg explore the dramatic changes in the law’s conception of young...
The History of juvenile justice started out to be something that would help juveniles grow into bein...