The
Correctional Association founded the Juvenile Justice
Project in 1997 in response to increasing calls
for more punitive and harsh responses to youths
who become involved in the juvenile justice system. In New York and across the nation, state legislatures
have enacted legislation that has increased the
number of offenses for which juveniles can be charged
in the adult criminal court; increased the length
of time for which young people can be incarcerated;
permitted youths to be incarcerated with adults;
and created maximum security placement centers
for juveniles. These kinds of regressive approaches to youth
crime represent a return to the abusive and unjust
conditions that originally led to the creation
of the juvenile justice system. Moreover, despite
the clear intersections between poverty, racism,
and youth incarceration in New York, city and state
leaders continue to spend huge sums of public money
to lock up youth of color from low-income families
rather than address the underlying societal factors
driving youth incarceration policies. Through its work, the Juvenile Justice Project
seeks to reorient the justice system away from
a punitive approach toward a stronger emphasis
on community-based prevention and alternatives
to jail and prison. In 2002, the Project released Rethinking
Juvenile Detention in New York City, a report
which presents a blueprint for transforming the
juvenile justice system in New York. The Juvenile
Justice Project believes that any effort to transform
youth justice policies should adopt a vision of community
justice – an effort to form creative
partnerships between community groups and justice
institutions to change the way the juvenile justice
system operates in low-income, urban neighborhoods
and in the larger society. More specifically, the Project: 1)
coordinates the Juvenile
Justice Coalition to advocate and lobby for fair and effective
responses to youth crime; 2)
produces reports,
position papers and fact sheets,
which analyze existing juvenile justice policies
and explore alternatives; 3)
educates the public and state and local legislators
about juvenile justice issues through media outreach,
public forums, advocacy
days in Albany, and other
public events; and 4)
trains young people to become leaders in the
movement to transform juvenile justice policies
in New York. In
2004, the Project launched Each
One Teach One, a comprehensive youth
leadership training and organizing program for
youth affected by incarceration. Building on its success, in 2006 the Project began another youth leadership program, SAFE Passages, which focuses on improving juvenile justice policy that affects lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender young people. For
more information contact Mishi Faruqee, Director
of the Juvenile Justice Project at (212) 254-5700
x315 or email
the Correctional Association. |