TY - JOUR
T1 - Welfare, justice, child development and human rights
T2 - A review of the objects of youth justice legislation in Australia
AU - Malvaso, Catia
AU - Day, Andrew
AU - McLachlan, Katherine
AU - Sarre, Rick
AU - Lynch, John
AU - Pilkington, Rhiannon
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - In Australia, as elsewhere, there is consensus that new and more effective ways of responding to young people who commit crimes need to be identified and, when available, implemented and evaluated. In this paper we review youth justice legislation across each Australian jurisdiction and consider how it provides the mandate for service delivery. We contextualise this with an account of historical variations in how the seemingly competing goals of welfare and justice have been balanced. This is followed by an overview of contemporary understandings of child development and human rights which are increasingly recognised as both relevant and important to the way in which the community works with justice-involved children and young people. The analysis illustrates how youth justice agencies are still expected to achieve multiple and, at times, conflicting legislated objectives which results in a lack of coherence in policy and practice. This serves only to limit effectiveness. We conclude that legislative reform will be necessary to realise any new vision for youth justice, especially if one of the overarching purposes is to protect vulnerable children.
AB - In Australia, as elsewhere, there is consensus that new and more effective ways of responding to young people who commit crimes need to be identified and, when available, implemented and evaluated. In this paper we review youth justice legislation across each Australian jurisdiction and consider how it provides the mandate for service delivery. We contextualise this with an account of historical variations in how the seemingly competing goals of welfare and justice have been balanced. This is followed by an overview of contemporary understandings of child development and human rights which are increasingly recognised as both relevant and important to the way in which the community works with justice-involved children and young people. The analysis illustrates how youth justice agencies are still expected to achieve multiple and, at times, conflicting legislated objectives which results in a lack of coherence in policy and practice. This serves only to limit effectiveness. We conclude that legislative reform will be necessary to realise any new vision for youth justice, especially if one of the overarching purposes is to protect vulnerable children.
KW - Youth justice
KW - Juvenile justice
KW - Legislation
KW - Australia
KW - Objects
KW - objects
KW - juvenile justice
KW - legislation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85186223453&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/10345329.2024.2313784
DO - 10.1080/10345329.2024.2313784
M3 - Article
SN - 1034-5329
VL - 36
SP - 451
EP - 471
JO - Current Issues in Criminal Justice
JF - Current Issues in Criminal Justice
IS - 4
ER -