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Re-forming Juvenile Justice: The New Zealand Experiment

NCJ Number
169924
Journal
Prison Journal Volume: 77 Issue: 2 Dated: (June 1997) Pages: 125-134
Author(s)
A Morris; G Maxwell
Date Published
1997
Length
10 pages
Annotation
This article describes and presents research findings on the system of juvenile justice adopted in New Zealand in 1989, which introduced radical and innovative features and made the family group conference the main mechanism for deciding how best to address juvenile offending.
Abstract
The reforms emphasized the involvement of juvenile offenders, families, and victims in deciding how best to handle each situation. The family group conference replaced or supplemented the Youth Court as the main decisionmaking forum in most of the more serious cases. Research has revealed that this approach has been relatively successful overall. Few juvenile offenders now appear in courts, few of these receive any type of court order, and even fewer receive any kind of residential or custodial order. About 85 percent of the youths who took part in family group conferences agreed to carry out active penalties such as community service, restitution, and similar actions. The inclusion of apologies in the statistics raised the percentage to 95 percent. Parents were generally actively involved in family group conferences, although the youths were less engaged in the decisionmaking process. The majority of victims who were involved in family group conferences had positive attitudes toward them. Finally, many of the concerns raised by commentators are not supported by the research. However, the need for adequate funding is a concern. Notes and 7 references (Author abstract modified)