Envisioning the future of youth justice: A focus group study with youth, family, frontline staff, and subject experts
•Youth, families, frontline staff, and subject experts share overarching priorities for youth justice.•An ideal future for youth justice systems means building pathways for youth success.•Participants envision systems that strengthen youth environments, teach accountability, and humanize youth.•Clai...
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Published in | Children and youth services review Vol. 169; p. 108097 |
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Main Authors | , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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Elsevier Ltd
01.02.2025
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Abstract | •Youth, families, frontline staff, and subject experts share overarching priorities for youth justice.•An ideal future for youth justice systems means building pathways for youth success.•Participants envision systems that strengthen youth environments, teach accountability, and humanize youth.•Claims about the extent of change and intervention needed were contentious.•Claims about challenging criminalization and intentional staffing varied in salience.
Despite a wave of recent progressive reforms to the US juvenile legal system (JLS), ongoing concerns about punitive, inequitable, and developmentally inappropriate aspects of these systems persist, and the path forward is highly contested. Drawing on the concept of claim-making from scholarship on contentious politics, this study compared a diverse group of actors’ priorities for the future of youth justice. A series of 9 focus groups were conducted with 92 participants from multiple regions of the United States, including 1) frontline JLS staff, 2) system-impacted youth and their families, and 3) JLS professionals/subject experts. The analysis produced one overarching theme: youth justice systems should build a pathway for youth success where the larger community ensures youth can access resources to thrive. Under this overarching theme, five sub-themes describe participants’ claims about how to enact this goal: “challenge criminalization of youth,” “strengthen the surrounding environment,” “humanize youth,” “teach accountability,” and “implement intentional staffing.” Two sub-themes were contentious in the subject expert/professional groups (challenge criminalization, strengthen surrounding environment) and two varied in salience between groups (challenge criminalization, implement intentional staffing). Results point towards a shared vision of the larger community creating a youth justice system that guides youth towards long-term success, and to some tensions and diverging priorities about specific elements of system change. Findings can inform directions for coalition building, dialogue, and continued research on institutional change. |
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AbstractList | •Youth, families, frontline staff, and subject experts share overarching priorities for youth justice.•An ideal future for youth justice systems means building pathways for youth success.•Participants envision systems that strengthen youth environments, teach accountability, and humanize youth.•Claims about the extent of change and intervention needed were contentious.•Claims about challenging criminalization and intentional staffing varied in salience.
Despite a wave of recent progressive reforms to the US juvenile legal system (JLS), ongoing concerns about punitive, inequitable, and developmentally inappropriate aspects of these systems persist, and the path forward is highly contested. Drawing on the concept of claim-making from scholarship on contentious politics, this study compared a diverse group of actors’ priorities for the future of youth justice. A series of 9 focus groups were conducted with 92 participants from multiple regions of the United States, including 1) frontline JLS staff, 2) system-impacted youth and their families, and 3) JLS professionals/subject experts. The analysis produced one overarching theme: youth justice systems should build a pathway for youth success where the larger community ensures youth can access resources to thrive. Under this overarching theme, five sub-themes describe participants’ claims about how to enact this goal: “challenge criminalization of youth,” “strengthen the surrounding environment,” “humanize youth,” “teach accountability,” and “implement intentional staffing.” Two sub-themes were contentious in the subject expert/professional groups (challenge criminalization, strengthen surrounding environment) and two varied in salience between groups (challenge criminalization, implement intentional staffing). Results point towards a shared vision of the larger community creating a youth justice system that guides youth towards long-term success, and to some tensions and diverging priorities about specific elements of system change. Findings can inform directions for coalition building, dialogue, and continued research on institutional change. |
ArticleNumber | 108097 |
Author | Abrams, Laura S. Angel, Kassandra Barnert, Elizabeth S. Lesnick, Julia |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Julia surname: Lesnick fullname: Lesnick, Julia email: julialesnick@ucla.edu organization: Department of Social Welfare, Luskin School of Public Affairs, University of California Los Angeles, USA – sequence: 2 givenname: Laura S. surname: Abrams fullname: Abrams, Laura S. organization: Department of Social Welfare, Luskin School of Public Affairs, University of California Los Angeles, USA – sequence: 3 givenname: Kassandra surname: Angel fullname: Angel, Kassandra organization: Department of Social Welfare, Luskin School of Public Affairs, University of California Los Angeles, USA – sequence: 4 givenname: Elizabeth S. surname: Barnert fullname: Barnert, Elizabeth S. organization: Department of Pediatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, USA |
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