Detention centers expose youth to harm and increase recidivism rates. Alternatives to detention are more effective and less costly. While detention reform efforts have reduced youth detention populations, hundreds of thousands of youth still cycle through detention centers each year, many for non-violent offenses. Funds would be better invested in community-based programs proven to reduce recidivism and engage family support systems.
2. The Dangers of Detention
Despite the lowest youth crime rates in 20 years, hundreds of
thousands of young people are admitted to and discharged from the
nation’s 757 secure detention centers each year
Detention centers are intended to temporarily house youth (typically a
day or two, but lasting as long as several months) who pose a high risk
of reoffending or who are deemed likely to not appear for their court
appearances
In 2006, there were about 26,000 youth in detention on any given day
About two-thirds of these youth are detained for nonviolent offenses
Exposes troubled youth to an environment that more closely resembles
adult prisons and jails than the kinds of community- and family-based
interventions proven to be most effective
Admitting youth into these facilities may lead to harmful effects,
leaving them at higher risk of injury or self-harm
3. Detention Can Increase Recidivism
A study in Wisconsin reported that in the four
counties studies, 70% of youth held in secure
detention were arrested or returned to secure
detention within one year of release
An Arkansas study found that 60% of the youth
studied were returned to the Department of Youth
Services (DYS) within three years
The most significant predictor of recidivism was
prior commitment and the odds of returning to DYS
increased 13.5 times for youth with a prior
commitment
4. Congregating Delinquents Negatively Affects Youth
Behavioral scientists are finding that bringing youth together
for treatment or services may make it more likely that they
will engage in delinquent behavior, especially when low-risk
youth are mixed with juveniles with higher levels of risk and
longer histories of delinquency
Congregating youth together for treatment in a group setting
causes them to have a higher recidivism rate and poorer
outcomes than youth who receive individual treatment –
called peer deviancy
Youths treated in a peer group setting reported significantly
higher levels of substance abuse, school difficulties,
delinquency, violence and adjustment difficulties in
adulthood and negative changes in attitudes toward antisocial
behavior, affiliation with antisocial peers, and identification
with deviancy, including recruitment into gangs
5. Alternatives to Detention Can Curb
Crime and Recidivism
Studies have shown that youth who are incarcerated are more likely
to recidivate than youth who are supervised in a community-based
setting or not detained at all
Research from Texas suggested that young people in community-
based placements are 14% less likely to commit future crimes than
youth who have been incarcerated
Elliott (1994) suggests that as many as a third of young people will
engage in delinquent behavior before they grow up but will
naturally “age out” of the delinquent behavior
Establishing a relationship with a significant other as well as
employment usually results in youthful offenders of all races aging
out of delinquent behavior as they reach young adulthood
Incarcerating juveniles may actually interrupt and delay the normal
pattern of aging out because detention disrupts their natural
engagement with families, school and work
6. The Impact of Detention on Youth’s Mental Health
Upwards of two-thirds of young people in detention centers could meet the criteria for
having a mental disorder
Detention has become a new dumping ground for young people with mental health issues
because there is no other place that can provide services to him or her
Adolescents in detention and correctional facilities are about ten times more likely to
suffer from psychosis than the general adolescent population
Young people with behavioral health problems simply get worse in detention, not better
Research shows that for one-third of incarcerated youth diagnosed with depression, the
onset of the depression occurred after they began their incarceration
A Oregon study shows that 24% of detained youth were found to have thoughts of suicide
over a seven-day period, with 34% of the youth suffering from a significant level of
depression
A 1994 study found that incarcerated youth experience from double to four times the
suicide rate of youth in community with 11,000 youth engaging in more than 17,000 acts
of suicidal behavior in the juvenile justice annually
Suicide in juvenile facilities is the leading cause of death, making up almost one-half of
all deaths in state operated juvenile correctional facilities
7. The Impact of Detention on School and Employment
Juvenile detention can interrupt a young person’s education and, once incarcerated,
some youth have a hard time returning to school – although this depends on the length of
time that a youth is placed in detention, the youth’s educational history, parental support,
and the willingness of the community school to accept the youth
Many community schools are reluctant to readmit these troubled youth once they are
returned to the community
43% of incarcerated youth receiving remedial education services in detention did not
return to school after release; another 16% enrolled in school but dropped out within five
months
Most incarcerated 9th graders return to school after incarceration but within a year of
enrolling, two-thirds to three-fourths withdraw or drop out of school; after four years,
less than 15% of these incarcerated 9th graders had completed their secondary education
The failure of detained youth to return to school also affects public safety – dropouts are
3.5 times more likely than high school graduates to be arrested
Areas with the most rapidly rising rates of incarceration are areas in which youth,
particularly African-American youth, have had the worst earnings and employment
experience
8. Detention is More Expensive than
Alternatives to Detention
The annual average cost per year of a detention bed – depending on geography and cost
of living – could range from $32,000 ($87 /day) to as high as $65,000 a year ($178 /day)
The cost of building, financing, and operating a single detention bed costs the public
between $1.25 and $1.5 million over a 20-year period of time
A number of communities that have invested in alternatives to detention have
documented the fiscal savings they achieved in contrast to what they would spend on
detaining a youth
The NTC Department of Juvenile Justice (2001) reported that one day in detention
($385) costs 15 times what it does to send a youth to a detention alternative ($25)
There will always be a need for juvenile detention, but because of the potentially
damaging effects, detention must be used sparingly and only for the youth who most
require such a setting
A juvenile justice system that concentrates spending on detention or confinement drains
available funds away from interventions that may be more effective at reducing
recidivism and promoting public safety
The cost of a youth offender’s crimes and incarceration over his or her lifetime (including
adult) can cost as much as $2.6 to $5.3 million
9. The Rise of Youth Detention:
Policy or Politics?
Why do juvenile justice systems continue to spend
valuable resources building more locked facilities to
detain low-risk youth?
The traditional mission of the juvenile justice system has been
altered by the politicization of crime policy in this country
Rising warnings of youth super-predators, school shootings,
and the excessive media reporting of serious episodes of
juvenile crime in the biggest cities fuel political momentum to
make the system tougher on kids
10. The Rise of Youth Detention Borne by Youth of Color
By 1997, in 30 out of 50 states minority youth represented the
majority of youth in detention
In 1997, the OJJDP found that in every state with the exception of
Vermont, the minority population of detained youth exceeded their
proportion in the general population
In 2003, African-American youth were detained at a rate 4.5 times
higher than Whites and Latino youth were detained at twice the rate
of Whites.
Minority youth represented 69% of all youth detained in 2006
White youth self-reported using heroin and cocaine at six times the
rate of African-American youth, but African-American youth are
almost three times as likely to be detained for a drug crime
In many jurisdictions, stereotypes may influence the decision of
whether or not a youth will be detained or released
11. Juvenile Detention Reforms
Taking Hold Across the Nation
The Juvenile Detention Alternative Initiative (JDAI) is a response to the inappropriate and
unnecessary detention of youth in the nation’s juvenile justice systems
Their goal is to make sure that locked detention is used only when necessary
Core strategies to achieve reductions in detention:
Intergovernmental collaboration Reliance on data
Objective admissions screening Expedited case processing
Alternatives to secure confinement Improved handling of “special cases”
Express strategies to reduce racial disparities Improving conditions of confinement
The goal of JDAI is to reduce the number of youth confined on any day and admitted to
detention over the course of a year and a reduction in the number of young people exposed
to the dangers inherent in detention
In the counties implementing JDAI, juvenile crime rates fell as much as, or more than,
national decreases in juvenile crime as well as experienced an improvement in the number of
young people who appear in court after they have been released from detention, further
reducing the need for detention
12. Rural Detention Reform
Justice systems in these communities often have fewer community-
based resources and facilities are often underfunded
Why detention reform is necessary in rural communities:
A substantial share of America’s youth and America’s delinquency problem resides in
rural America
Rural areas face different and often more difficult challenges than urban communities
in operating detention programs and in implementing detention reform
Rural jurisdictions have identified a number of innovative strategies and promising
practices for addressing the special challenges of rural detention reform
Bringing detention reform only to urban and suburban communities and not to rural
areas would allow an unacceptable double standard in the treatment of court-involved
youths
Fewer juveniles are arrested and a youth might be detained for a
longer period of time before his or her court date; additionally, there
might not be detention facilities in many rural counties and youth
might be held in adult jails
13. A Better Future: Invest Juvenile Justice Funds
in Programs Proven to Work
If detention reform is successful, communities should be able to
reinvest the funds that are spent on detention beds and new
detention centers in other youth-serving systems or other
interventions proven to reduce recidivism
Several programs and initiatives are proven to reduce recidivism and
crime in a cost effective manner:
Treatment occurs with their families or in a family-like setting
Treatment occurs at home or close to home
Services are delivered in a culturally respectful and competent manner
Treatment is built around the youth and family strengths
A wide range services and resources are delivered to the youth, as well as
their families
These proven programs identify the various aspects of youth – their
strengths and weaknesses as well as the strengths and resources of
their families and communities.
Progress is based on realistic outcomes and carefully matches the
particular needs of the youth and family to the appropriate
intervention strategy