Research shows that addressing adolescent misbehavior outside of the justice system through diversion typically yields better outcomes: youth who are diverted from the justice system are far less likely to be arrested for subsequent offenses and far more likely to succeed in education and employment than comparable youth who are arrested and prosecuted in juvenile court. Greater and more targeted use of diversion has also shown promise to reduce the persistent racial and ethnic disparities that pervade youth justice systems.
“Diversion has long been an option in juvenile justice, but it has been sorely underutilized – especially for youth of color,” says report’s author, Richard A. Mendel, Senior Research Fellow at The Sentencing Project. “It is gratifying to see the youth justice field awakening to the importance of diversion in lieu of arrest and formal court processing, and to see legislatures across the country support greater use of diversion. We hope to see this momentum accelerate in the years to come.”
The report describes a host of promising diversion reforms that have been implemented by states and local youth justice systems:
Kansas, Michigan, New Hampshire, Utah, and Washington, as well as Harris County (Houston), TX and Ramsey County (St. Paul), MN have created new laws, programs, or pathways to increase the use of diversion. Additionally, Connecticut, Idaho, North Dakota, and Clark County (Las Vegas), NV have embraced reforms to steer lower-risk youth with significant human service needs away from the justice system.
Kentucky, New York, and several counties in Iowa and Pennsylvania have been leaders in efforts to address longstanding racial and ethnic disparities in diversion by undertaking comprehensive reviews to identify and address problematic practices that have been causing diversion disparities, and by revising diversion-related policies that often disadvantage youth of color.
Improve diversion practices and increase the success of youth once diverted. For instance:
Colorado, Minnesota, and Nebraska have expanded the use of restorative justice as an alternative to formal court involvement; Florida and Los Angeles County, CA have embraced reforms to substantially increase the use of pre-arrest diversion, which is even more effective than diversion from court following an arrest; and Kansas, Kentucky, and South Dakota, as well as Santa Cruz County, CA and Davidson County (Nashville), TN have been leaders in providing support to diverted youth or taking other steps to minimize the share of youth who are returned to court for noncompliance with diversion.
Colorado, Indiana, Massachusetts, and Utah are among the states that have taken action to improve the collection and sharing of data to better inform diversion policies and programs.
"Protect and Redirect: America’s Growing Movement to Divert Youth Out of the Justice System" is the first of a five-part series called "Protect and Redirect" that examines the growing movement to expand diversion programs around the country and provides practical tools for criminal legal practitioners, youth justice lawmakers and advocates to implement successful diversion programs. Subsequent reports in the series will be released in April 2024 and will focus on:
Reducing racial and ethnic disparities;
Best practices for juvenile diversion;
Using data to reduce disparities and improve outcomes in diversion; and
Effective messaging to promote juvenile diversion reform.
About The Sentencing Project - The Sentencing Project advocates for effective and humane responses to crime that minimize imprisonment and criminalization of youth and adults by promoting racial, ethnic, economic, and gender justice.
––––––––––––––––––––
Subscribe to the Legal News!
https://legalnews.com/Home/Subscription
Full access to public notices, articles, columns, archives, statistics, calendar and more
Day Pass Only $4.95!
One-County $80/year
Three-County & Full Pass also available