Locking up kids damages their mental health and sets them up for more disadvantage. Is this what we want?


Author: Chris Cunneen

(MENAFN- The Conversation) Reports this week of anIndigenous boy with a disability held naked for days in a Brisbane Police cellhave once again raised the issue of how best to treat our most vulnerable young offenders, and the impact of their incarceration.

These impacts are long-term and stark, affecting both young people's mental health and the course of their lives. Indigenous children and those with a disability are among children particularly at risk of the impacts of incarceration.

How does locking up young people in juvenile detention or in police cells affect their future? And how can we prevent them getting caught up in the juvenile justice system in the first place?


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This week's example in Brisbane comes just a month after the ABC Four Corners investigationInside the Watch House , which exposed Queensland's increasing use of police cells (or watch houses) to hold children as young as 10, sometimes for several weeks.

The investigation showed how some children were held in isolation and others were placed with adult offenders. Records and cases recounted by key interviewees, including Queensland'spublic guardian , told distressing accounts.

The investigation showed children, many with cognitive, mental health and other disabilities held in custody because there was nowhere else to take them. That's because juvenile justice detention centres were full and there were few alternatives. Most of those children were Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander.


How big a problem is this?

On an average night in 2018 , there were 980 children held in juvenile detention centres across Australia. A total of 54% of them were Indigenous children who are26 times more likelythan non-Indigenous children to be in detention.

Most children in detention, and virtually all children held in police cells, areunsentenced– they have not been found guilty of an offence. Themost common offenceschildren are charged with are theft (over one-third of all offences), common assault, illicit drugs and public order.


Read more:
Why are so many Indigenous kids in detention in the NT in the first place?

There are no national or state or territory data on children held in police cells but, as we saw in the Four Corners program, Queensland holds many children in watch houses.

Evidencefrom NSW showsmany children with cognitive disability and challenging behaviour are held in police cells, often for their own safety or because no service or agency is willing or able to accommodate them. Most of these children are known to police as victims, or highly vulnerable to exploitation, before their arrest and detention.


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Almost every young person in WA detention has a severe brain impairment

There aregrave concernsabout the effects of subjecting young children to detention of any kind. These concerns are multiplied many times when a child:



  • comes from a disadvantaged community

  • comes from a family under severe financial, health, housing and other forms of stress

  • has mental and/or cognitive, hearing or other disability

  • has experienced violence and abuse

  • is in out-of-home care, or

  • is an Indigenous child.

This is the profile ofmost children in custody .


What are the impacts of locking up a child?

What are the effects of locking up a child under 14 or 15 in a police cell or a juvenile justice detention centre?

Child development experts are clear that children's brains and patterns of behaviourare still developinguntil their late teens. Teenage children arealso experimentingwith how to relate to the world around them, as well as testing social and cultural boundaries.


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Locking children up during these crucial yearsaffects their development . Among other things, it increases children's risk of depression, suicide and self harm; leads to poor emotional development; results in poor education outcomes and further fractures family relationships.

When children are held in isolation, the effects on a child's health and well-being can besevere, long-term and irreversible . For example, given many children in detention have been victims of abuse, there is significant potential forre-traumatisation .


How about kids with disabilities?

Research on the pathways of children with a disability into the criminal justice systemshowsthe earlier these children have contact with police, the greater their likelihood of being held in police cells and then juvenile justice detention.

They are likely tonot receivedisability and health services, or other supports such as disability-appropriate education and counselling. They are also more likely to transition into adult prison.

They have significantlylower educational outcomesthan their peers and are much more likely todevelop further mental illnessandchronic health problems .

Setting a child's life trajectory in this way is abreach of the rights of the child . It entrenches children in an offending culture.


Time to raise the age of criminal responsibility?

These negative outcomes for children have resultedin callsto raise the minimum age of criminal responsibility – the age at which the state can hold a person responsible for a criminal offence.

In Australia, this is ten years of age. Australia isone of the fewaffluent countries to have such a low age. There is common law protection for children aged ten to 14. But in practice this haslimited capacityto protect children in this age range.

There isoverwhelming evidencethat managing children through the criminal justice system leads not to rehabilitation and reformation, but to greater entrenchment in the criminal justice system. Yet, every year we placehundreds of childrenunder 14 in detention.


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Age-old question: when should children be responsible for their crimes?

In particular, the low age of criminal responsibility adversely affects Indigenous children. They make upmore than two-thirdsof children under 14 years who come before the courts and are sentenced to either detention or a community-based sanction such as probation.

The low age of criminal responsibilityalso gravely affectschildren with cognitive disability who may be highly vulnerable to exploitation and persuasion, have low impulse control and a lack of understanding of the impact of their actions.

Raising the age to anything less than 14 years old is unlikely to achieve the desired result of minimising the adverse consequences of criminalisation. Even a few days in a police cellsets childrenon the path to long-term involvement with the criminal justice system.


What else can we do?

Instead of criminalisation,early interventionto support vulnerable children coming from highly disadvantaged backgrounds would provide a hopeful future and not one trapped in the criminal justice system.

These supports depend on the particular child's needs but can include family support, suitable accommodation, health services, disability support services, counselling, and in the case of Aboriginal children, connection to community-controlled organisations.


Read more:
Rethinking youth justice: there are alternatives to juvenile detention



    Incarceration
    Criminal justice
    Prison
    Youth mental health
    Criminal justice reform
    Indigenous incarceration
    Youth detention


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The Conversation

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