Blog
Recidivism, Public Safety & Juvenile Justice: Let the Facts Guide
by Malachi Garza
March 8th, 2010
by Malachi Garza
March 8th, 2010
A recent story broadcast on Omaha television highlighting the heartbreaking death of a juvenile justice system-involved 15-year-old illustrates the complexities of the reform needed within system.
The Distracter Factor
by Lauren Jones
March 5th, 2010
by Lauren Jones
March 5th, 2010
Public education protests should send the message that students, parents, teachers and other education staff are fed up with tuition fee increases while services decrease. Instead, news coverage focused heavily on the havoc created by those who broke from the larger protests yesterday across California.
Charges Against SF Boy Signal Break in System
by Tshaka Barrows
March 2nd, 2010
by Tshaka Barrows
March 2nd, 2010
A recent incident in San Francisco demonstrates a serious lapse in our juvenile justice system and the way that officials within it overreact to youth misbehavior.
Louisiana’s first moderate-security juvenile jail: A Welcome First Step
by Sarah Covert , Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana
February 24th, 2010
by Sarah Covert , Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana
February 24th, 2010
It is not often that we are heartened by the moves of our statewide justice system. But, last week the Louisiana Office of Juvenile Justice (OJJ) announced that a center for the developmentally disabled would be converted in 2011 to a moderate-security juvenile facility. It is the first time that the state of Louisiana is looking to design small therapeutic facilities that are home-like and lack razor wire and cells, a rarity in Missouri.
Captured by the Clueless
by James Bell
January 13th, 2010
by James Bell
January 13th, 2010
Last week, the Bureau of Justice Statistics released a report that revealed about 12 percent of youths nationwide held in state-run, privately run or local facilities reported some type of sexual victimization including forced sexual activity with other youth and staff. Staff sexual misconduct was higher in state-run facilities.
Tackling New York’s Juvenile Justice Crisis
by Charisa A. Smith, Esq.
December 21st, 2009
by Charisa A. Smith, Esq.
December 21st, 2009
New York State spends $215,000 per year to expose each vulnerable child in its unsafe juvenile prisons to months spent far from home, with inadequate mental health care, and an increased likelihood of reoffending upon their release. The juvenile justice system neither rehabilitates youth nor keeps communities safe.
One Size Does Not Fit All: A Slippery Slope to Increased Juvenile Incarceration
by James Bell
November 25th, 2009
by James Bell
November 25th, 2009
A recent incident in Omaha, Nebraska brings urgency to an issue soon to be debated in Congress regarding the handling of youth offenders by juvenile and criminal justice systems. In this case, police shot a 15-year-old boy in the chest following a traffic stop. Investigators said the boy shot at police first. The case has led one local senator to call for an overhaul of Nebraska's juvenile justice system that would identify "aggressive juvenile offenders."
An Uphill Climb to the Bottom
by James Bell, W. Haywood Burns Institute
November 17th, 2009
by James Bell, W. Haywood Burns Institute
November 17th, 2009
I continue to be amazed at how many people continue to behave as though race and involvement with the criminal justice system are synonymous. Has it become an accepted fact of life in the United States that the machinery of justice applies almost solely to people of color? I shuddered to realize this once again recently while reading editorials about the Supreme Court’s deliberations regarding juveniles receiving life imprisonment without the possibility of parole in the U.S., the only country that engages in this barbaric practice.
The Old Way vs. The “Missouri Model”
by Thomas Lee
July 16th, 2009
by Thomas Lee
July 16th, 2009
I recently had the opportunity to tour two very different juvenile justice facilities with the Youth Law Center that personify ongoing divisions in the field about how we should deal with youth in trouble with the law.
What Happens When We Lose the Fear?
by Sarah True
June 29th, 2009
by Sarah True
June 29th, 2009
I recently toured two youth correctional facilities of the California Division of Juvenile Justice in Stockton, and honestly, I don't know what adjective to use to describe my experience. Intense? Eye-opening? Every one I think of seems applicable for some portions, and wildly inaccurate for others.
Explaining the Shift: A three-part blog on factors contributing to disparities in the juvenile justice system
by Audrey Grace
June 19th, 2009
by Audrey Grace
June 19th, 2009
The factors that influenced disproportionate minority confinement include the war on drugs, "broken windows" and "quality of life" policing, zero tolerance in school discipline, and the move away from the rehabilitative function of the juvenile justice system.
Dire State of Jails in Indian Country
by Joseph Myers
April 14th, 2009
by Joseph Myers
April 14th, 2009
The Indian reservations of this country are studies in extremes; from perceived overconsumption from gaming to substandard housing, inferior educational and medical facilities, to inadequate justice systems.
The Difference: Being Black or White and a Murderer
by Christina Gomez
April 1st, 2009
by Christina Gomez
April 1st, 2009
It has been interesting and sad to see how the very fact that Lovelle was an ex-offender has led him to be deemed him a "devil" by the mainstream media and the general public and unworthy of an investigation into the factors that created a 26-year-old who apparently desperately did not want to return to the system that may have helped turn him into a “cop killer.”
Federal Justice Monies Lack Oversight on Abuse and Racial Disparities
by Audrey Grace, BI intern
March 16th, 2009
by Audrey Grace, BI intern
March 16th, 2009
"Thank goodness for 'The Wire.'" That's what a friend of mine once said at a conference on justice and law enforcement, in reference to the HBO series. The television program's central theme was there are no "good guys" or "bad guys" in the nation's "War on Drugs." And the victims are clearly the children.
Sign of the Times: Police Abuse Caught on Tape
by Christina Gomez
March 11th, 2009
by Christina Gomez
March 11th, 2009
Over the last two months, technology and a growing movement of concerned citizens have exposed shocking incidents that speak to why we work so hard to assure that detention be used as a last resort for youth.
Dying Young and Black
by Tshaka Barrows
March 3rd, 2009
by Tshaka Barrows
March 3rd, 2009
In too many communities across this country, violence among black youth is viewed as almost inevitable...driven by intentional policies of neglect and abuse by the political and economic elites.
Boys Need Help, Not Jail
by Christina Gomez
February 24th, 2009
by Christina Gomez
February 24th, 2009
When I was a baby, my parents came into my room to find my older brother trying to smother me with a pillow. He was three years older than me and upset that my dad had rocked me to sleep after telling my brother that he was "too big" to be rocked like a baby. In his childlike mind, I was the reason why his daddy wouldn’t rock him. His action could have proved deadly, but could only be explained by the sentiment that he was only 4-years-old – and didn’t understand the consequences.
The Soundz of Blackness
by James Bell
January 27th, 2009
by James Bell
January 27th, 2009
January has shaped up as a month in which the voices of Black men have grabbed headlines: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., new President Barack Obama and police shooting victim Oscar Grant.
James Bell on Australian Juvenile Justice
by James Bell
December 23rd, 2008
by James Bell
December 23rd, 2008
Australia is reputed, along with New Zealand, to posses juvenile justice systems that truly believe the use of detention should be a last resort. Based on a week of personal observations and interviews, I believe that reputation is well deserved.
Greetings from the BI
by Burns Institute
December 15th, 2008
by Burns Institute
December 15th, 2008
This has been a significant year for us. Today, we are celebrating five years of working to reduce disparities in the juvenile justice system with the release of our first publication and the launch of our redesigned website.















