Abstract

ABSTRACT This article reconsiders youth justice detention in the Australian context by exploring the lived experiences of youth detention in New South Wales (NSW) and the Northern Territory (NT). In drawing upon narratives from children and young people who have experienced detention, this article argues for shifting youth detention away from highly securitised environments, instead presenting an alternative and provisional relational rights-based framework and approach. This reimagined youth justice detaining environment builds upon the current efforts to raise the minimum age of criminal responsibility across Australia to 14, and other significant measures of decarceration. This dramatically limited and transformed carceral environment would actively seek to support these young people to reach their potential through nurturing their capabilities in a trauma-informed, therapeutic and relational rights-based environment, and then linking them in with highly resourced long-term transition pathways away from the justice system.

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