Lael Chester, CfJJ Executive Director, was featured on WHDH Monday night discussing the importance of transparency in the Probation Department. See the clip here.
Archive for August, 2010
The Need for Transparency in Probation
August 26, 2010From “Juvie” to Worse
August 12, 2010As a response to the Op-Ed on youth finding greater safety in juvenile facilities than their own communities (reposted on this blog last week), the Boston Globe featured a letter to the editor discussing another side of the phenomenon– what happens to young people as they move into the world of adult corrections.
From ‘juvie’ to worse
August 10, 2010
TAISHA STURDIVANT describes a phenomenon among some youth in tough neighborhoods that I have observed in my 24 years of work in the adult correctional system (“When a safe haven for youth is a lockup,’’ Op-ed, Aug. 2). She asks, “Are things so bad in Boston neighborhoods that some young men willingly get themselves sent to juvenile detention in order to be safe?’’ Unfortunately, young offenders who graduate, so to speak, from “juvie’’ to the adult system tend to bring expectations about the correctional system, developed in “juvie,’’ with them to the adult facility. They soon discover that the adult system is less tolerant and forgiving.
When a safe haven for youth is lockup
August 5, 2010A recent Op-Ed in the Boston Globe discusses how juvenile crime may be driven, in part, by youth who see detention facilities as a safer alternative to their own neighborhoods. How common do you think this thinking is among young people? Do you think that the perception of lockups being safer than home influences those working in the juvenile justice system when they make decisions about juveniles?
When a safe haven for youth is a lockup
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ARE THINGS so bad in Boston neighborhoods that some young men willingly get themselves sent to juvenile detention in order to be safe?
A close friend from Dorchester told me it is safer in lockup because, “If you have drama with someone, the correction officers separate you. In the hood there are no time outs or mediators. If you have problems, you face them, alone. Even when you no longer want to be involved, they will find you.’’
For some, juvenile detention is very much like summer camp — most people hate being shipped off, some never get adjusted, but after a while it’s not as bad as it seems. Good behavior is rewarded, and detainees can earn take-out, movie, and video game rights. Still, that is not what makes detention appealing. For some, it is the certainty that they will see another day. Read the rest of this entry ?