An effective juvenile justice system holds young people accountable for their actions in age - appropriate ways that best promote community safety.
Not exact matches
Webinar Recording:
Effective Juvenile Justice Reforms in the Era of ESSA This webinar provided a brief overview of ESSA requirements for students in the juvenile justice system and highlighted models from around the country that are effectively implementing these m
Juvenile Justice Reforms in the Era of ESSA This webinar provided a brief overview of ESSA requirements for students in the juvenile justice system and highlighted models from around the country that are effectively implementing these ma
Justice Reforms in the Era of ESSA This webinar provided a brief overview of ESSA requirements for students in the
juvenile justice system and highlighted models from around the country that are effectively implementing these m
juvenile justice system and highlighted models from around the country that are effectively implementing these ma
justice system and highlighted models from around the country that are effectively implementing these mandates.
Increasing the number of youth with behavioral health disorders diverted out of the
juvenile justice system to
effective community - based programs and services... Read More
OJJDP accomplishes this by supporting States and local communities in their efforts to develop and implement
effective and coordinated prevention and intervention programs and to improve the
juvenile justice system so that it maintains public safety, holds offenders accountable, and provides treatment and rehabilitation tailored to the needs of families and individuals.
National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN) The NCTSN works to serves the nation's traumatized children and their families by raising public awareness of the scope and serious impact of child traumatic stress on the safety and healthy development of America's children and youth; advancing a broad range of
effective services and interventions by creating trauma - informed developmentally and culturally appropriate programs that improve the standard of care; working with established
systems of care including the health, mental health, education, law enforcement, child welfare,
juvenile justice, and military family service
systems to ensure that there is a comprehensive trauma - informed continuum of accessible care; and fostering a community dedicated to collaboration within and beyond the NCTSN to ensure that widely shared knowledge and skills become a sustainable national resource.
This model is widely used for preventing recidivism in the (
juvenile) criminal
justice system, as various meta - analyses have shown that judicial interventions aimed at behavioral change are most
effective when delivered according to this model (Andrews et al. 1990; Andrews and Dowden 1999).