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Date: April 30, 2024 Tue

Time: 12:05 am

Results for youth conferencing

3 results found

Author: Jacobson, Jessica

Title: Making Amends: Restorative Youth Justice in Northern Ireland

Summary: The Youth Conference Service, established in Northern Ireland in 2003, placed restorative justice at the heart of the youth justice system, integrated within both the prosecution and sentencing processes. Since then, the number of young people engaged in youth conferencing has grown year on year and, to date, more than 5,500 referrals have been made to the service. There is sound evidence that victims who attend conferences express high-levels of satisfaction with the process and outcomes, and levels of participation are reasonably high. There are encouraging signs that youth conferencing is leading to a reduction in reoffending rates. The establishment of the Youth Conference Service has also contributed to an overall decline in the use of custody for young offenders, and to an increasing rate of diversion of young people out of the formal criminal justice process. This report, commissioned as part of the Prison Reform Trust’s strategy to reduce child and youth imprisonment in the UK, explores the experience and impact of youth conferencing in Northern Ireland and looks at the potential benefits of introducing a similar model to the youth justice system in England and Wales.

Details: London: Prison Reform Trust, 2009. 24p.

Source: Internet Resource" Accessed September 13, 2010 at: http://www.prisonreformtrust.org.uk/uploads/documents/making_amends.pdf

Year: 2009

Country: United Kingdom

URL: http://www.prisonreformtrust.org.uk/uploads/documents/making_amends.pdf

Shelf Number: 119785

Keywords:
Juvenile Diversion
Juvenile Offenders
Recidivism
Restorative Justice
Youth Conferencing

Author: Maruna, Shadd

Title: Youth Conferencing as Shame Management: Results of a Long-term Follow-Up Study

Summary: The Northern Ireland Youth Conferencing Service (YCS) was launched in December 2003 in response to recommendations made in the Belfast Agreement of 1998. The YCS conferencing process involves a meeting between the young person (between 10 and 18) who offended, the victim, and others who have been affected by the crime. The focus is on all parties resolving how the young person can both make amends for the crime, and also ensure that future offending is avoided. This report presents the findings from a qualitative, process evaluation of the long-term life outcomes for a small sample (N=26) of young people involved in this process due to the commission of a crime. Participants were interviewed at least one year after their initial involvement with the YCS in order to discern whether the conference has had any lasting impact on their lives and their self-understandings. Interviews were transcribed and coded for patterns in the participants’ reflections on the conferencing process, their postconference lives, and their involvement with criminality and risky behaviours.

Details: Cambridge, UK: ARCS Ltd., 2011. 78p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed September 13, 2011 at: http://www.youthjusticeagencyni.gov.uk/document_uploads//SHAD_MARUNA_STUDY.pdf

Year: 2011

Country: United Kingdom

URL: http://www.youthjusticeagencyni.gov.uk/document_uploads//SHAD_MARUNA_STUDY.pdf

Shelf Number: 122730

Keywords:
Juvenile Offenders (U.K).
Victim-Offender Mediation
Youth Conferencing

Author: Northern Ireland. Criminal Justice Inspectorate

Title: The effectiveness of youth conferencing

Summary: The report, 'The effectiveness of youth conferencing' examined how the Youth Justice Agency (YJA) used youth conferences to deal with young offenders in supporting them to accept responsibility for their behaviour and its impact on their victims. The inspection revealed that the youth conference process is working more effectively and efficiently than identified in past CJI reports published in 2008 and 2010. Higher risk young people had been appropriately channelled into an Intensive Supervision and Support Programme (ISSP) which provided a more robust method of ensuring young persons' needs are met in a way that helped prevent re-offending. This report identifies that around 40% of referrals involved young people who were looked-after in the care home system, and there were inconsistencies in how these young people are dealt with when they commit offences. The report calls for the development of a joint strategy between the YJA and the Health Trusts aimed at integrating restorative practices within all care homes in support of youth conferences.

Details: Belfast: Criminal Justice Inspectorate of Northern Ireland, 2015. 37p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed March 26, 2015 at: http://www.cjini.org/CJNI/files/c3/c35d6f56-03e9-4b28-be6e-3a948107c6e9.pdf

Year: 2015

Country: United Kingdom

URL: http://www.cjini.org/CJNI/files/c3/c35d6f56-03e9-4b28-be6e-3a948107c6e9.pdf

Shelf Number: 135058

Keywords:
Intensive Supervision
Juvenile Offenders (Northern Ireland)
Restorative Justice
Youth Conferencing