NCJ Number
186264
Date Published
January 2001
Length
2 pages
Annotation
This paper examines planning for new secure juvenile facilities and renovating or expanding existing facilities.
Abstract
The most effective interventions for juvenile offenders are comprehensive, community-based programs that provide a continuum of services and sanctions. These include prevention programming, a system of graduated sanctions, residential treatment, and aftercare. Secure confinement is the most costly and severe response to delinquency. Jurisdictions should ensure that alternatives to confinement are being used effectively and that new or expanded facilities are developed only when warranted. An important training program is Planning of New Institutions for Juvenile Facilities (Juvenile PONI) workshops. The Juvenile PONI workshops introduce operational, programming, and design concepts relevant to facility development and provide opportunities for participants to apply the concepts in creating action plans. They clearly define the unique characteristics that distinguish juveniles from adults and explore how those characteristics require that juvenile facilities be designed differently from adult facilities. Resources
Date Published: January 1, 2001
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Research Review: Why do Prospective and Retrospective Measures of Maltreatment Differ? A Narrative Review
- "Suffering in Deafening Silence": Suicide Ideation and Attempted Suicide in the Lives of Incarcerated Rural West Virginia Girls
- Research to Practice Brief: Social Media, Digital Wellness, & Mentoring