During any meaningful conversation about youth justice in Scotland it is all but inevitable that The Kilbrandon Report will be mentioned given that it continues to act as a touchstone for practitioners, policymakers, researchers and politicians. As noted by Professor Stewart Asquith in the Preface to the reprinted version of the report, “The Kilbrandon Report was, and still remains, one of the most influential policy statements on how a society should deal with ‘children in trouble’” (Asquith, 1995: vi). The release of this briefing paper falls, by chance, almost exactly half a century on from the presentation to Parliament by the Secretary of State for Scotland of The Kilbrandon Report in April 1964. At such a significant juncture it seems...
This paper explores the theme of continuity and change in the history of Scottish juvenile justice, ...
This article traces the origins and development of fresh diversionary initiatives to respond to juve...
We all live and work in communities that are affected by crime. Understanding youth justice and yout...
A provocation paper commissioned by the British Academy for the Childhood Policy Programme. Explores...
he Kilbrandon committee was established in 1961 in response to concerns about rising levels of youth...
First paragraph: Although consolidated under the same political union, the four nations of the Unite...
The 50th anniversary of the publication of the Kilbrandon report provides an opportunity to reflect ...
The aim of every juvenile justice system should surely be to get it right for every child? It is poi...
I would like to thank the Sutherland Trust for the invitation to give this lecture. It provides an o...
In 2003, the youth justice system in Scotland entered a new phase with the introduction of a pilot y...
In the light of the Scottish Executive's ongoing review of the children's hearings system, and recen...
Welcome to the third issue of 2014 of the Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care. This year mark...
The Criminal Justice and Licensing (Scotland) Bill currently before the Scottish Parliament represen...
Explores the history of juvenile justice and the day industrial school movement in 19th-century Scot...
Fifty years after the publication of the Kilbrandon Report 1964, which paved the way for the creatio...
This paper explores the theme of continuity and change in the history of Scottish juvenile justice, ...
This article traces the origins and development of fresh diversionary initiatives to respond to juve...
We all live and work in communities that are affected by crime. Understanding youth justice and yout...
A provocation paper commissioned by the British Academy for the Childhood Policy Programme. Explores...
he Kilbrandon committee was established in 1961 in response to concerns about rising levels of youth...
First paragraph: Although consolidated under the same political union, the four nations of the Unite...
The 50th anniversary of the publication of the Kilbrandon report provides an opportunity to reflect ...
The aim of every juvenile justice system should surely be to get it right for every child? It is poi...
I would like to thank the Sutherland Trust for the invitation to give this lecture. It provides an o...
In 2003, the youth justice system in Scotland entered a new phase with the introduction of a pilot y...
In the light of the Scottish Executive's ongoing review of the children's hearings system, and recen...
Welcome to the third issue of 2014 of the Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care. This year mark...
The Criminal Justice and Licensing (Scotland) Bill currently before the Scottish Parliament represen...
Explores the history of juvenile justice and the day industrial school movement in 19th-century Scot...
Fifty years after the publication of the Kilbrandon Report 1964, which paved the way for the creatio...
This paper explores the theme of continuity and change in the history of Scottish juvenile justice, ...
This article traces the origins and development of fresh diversionary initiatives to respond to juve...
We all live and work in communities that are affected by crime. Understanding youth justice and yout...