Overview Cameo House & Women's Services Community Options for Youth (COY) Detention Diversion Advocacy Program (DDAP) Expert Sentencing Support Services Juvenile Collaborative Reentry Unit (JCRU) No Violence Alliance (NoVA) Technical Assistance Overview California Sentencing Institute Next Generation Fellowship Legislation Transparency & Accountability

Wasting Tax Dollars: Public Relations and the California Youth Corrections System California Progress Report, April 12010

The Myth of Mean Girls New York Times, April 12010

Read CJCJ’s newest study, ”

At the close of my last blog (“More Abuse in Youth Prisons”) I suggested doing a simple search on the Internet and type in words like abuse in juvenile institutions” and select some states at random. I said at the time that I would continue my search. And so I did. And what I found was way beyond what I expected. I don’t often like to use the word epidemic” since it is so value-loaded and defies precise definition. One definition from Webster’s includes widespread growth” and so I…

CJCJ is developing a new component to our public education efforts. We are creating regular news broadcasts to further educate the public regarding numerous important events occurring within the justice system. The stories we will cover deal with a number of issues to include policy change, violations of current criminal or juvenile justice policies, and much more. We believe you will benefit from our broadcasts, as they provide quick and easy access to key information on pressing criminal…

In January 2010, the Campbell Collaboration published a report titled Formal System Processing of Juveniles: Effects on Delinquency .” This report offers an analysis of the effects of formal processing of juveniles. The debate involving formal processing of juveniles has two components: deterrence and the labeling effect. Proponents argue that formal processing deters juveniles by scaring off low-level offenders. It is also believed formal processing screens high-level offenders allowing…

The recent report titled Proposition 63: Is the Mental Health Act Reaching California’s Transitional Age Foster Youth? ” from Children’s Advocacy Institute estimates that about 4,000 California youth age out of the foster care system annually. Proposition 63 provides services to Transition Age Youth (TAY) and Transition Age Foster Youth (TAFY). The report indicates that California is failing to provide services to these youth, with most counties receiving a grade F”. Once a youth enters the…

My earlier blog focused on long-term California statistics showing Latinos, the most immigration-impacted ethnicity, actually show bigger declines in arrests over the last three decades than do populations dominated by long-term residents, such as Whites. This blog uses national prison statistics to examine another dimension of this issue, with the same conclusion: contrary to popular claims, the U.S. is not suffering a recent immigrant crime wave, legal or illegal, second generation, or…

The January 2010 special report from the National Council on Crime and Delinquency (NCCD) titled The Extravagance of Imprisonment Revisited ” analyzes the cost effectiveness of alternative sentencing nationwide, highlighting California, Texas, New York, and Florida. Although there are numerous alternative sentences for non-serious offenders, this report focuses on four methods: electronic monitoring, reporting programs, drug treatment, and drug courts. The fiscal savings is significant with…

American Conservative publisher Ron Unz has always taken a refreshingly wonkish approach to public policy. His latest, His-Panic , compares national imprisonment and urban crime rates involving Latinos versus other US populations to challenge talk TV sensationalists and axe-grinding ideologues who have fallen for a myth of immigrant lawlessness.” Unz’s findings have fueled outrage among anti-immigrant forces. CJCJ has taken a different approach to analyzing crime, but our conclusions…

Hundreds of news stories and expert commentaries, with few exceptions, depict juvenile crime as soaring, becoming more violent, and involving ever-younger killers and criminals. Occasionally, youth crime is depicted as declining, but only when interest groups are positioned to take credit. A typical recent news story, Younger and Twice as Violent ” (see Anderson Cooper 360 ‚” citing the murders of 28 Chicago schoolchildren in the previous year, declared youth violence is on the rise around…

In the two most recent blogs, Dan Macallair called attention to the continued abuse being reported by the news media. He first noted reports dating back to the 19 th century in the San Francisco Industrial School, noting that this was an institution created in an era that began with the New York House of Refuge, which was abusive in the extreme and eventually had to be closed. Then he jumped on the proverbial time machine” and took us to present-day Texas and California — same story, more…