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Skip to contentAboutStaffSupportersResource HubSubscribeSupportJuvenile Justice Information Exchange - Juvenile Justice News for People Who Care About Children and the LawJuvenile Justice Information Exchange (https://jjie.org/)MoreIdeas and OpinionsLegislationEducationParentingProfessional OpportunitiesFrom the Bureaus The Chicago BureauThe Los Angeles BureauThe New York BureauResource Hub Community-Based AlternativesEvidence-Based PracticesJuvenile Indigent DefenseMental Health & Substance AbuseRacial-Ethnic FairnessRe-entryCategoriesIdeas and OpinionsLegislationEducationParentingProfessional OpportunitiesFrom the BureausResource HubAboutStaffSupportersResource HubSubscribeAl Jazeera Documentary Looks Inside New Mexico LockupBy: Matt Smith | 18 hours agoKeith is seven months into a two-year stretch in New Mexico’s juvenile justice system, committed for shoplifting and violating probation. It’s the fourth birthday he’s spent in some sort of state custody, and he says he’s ready to change his life. But he’s still struggling to rein in his recurring flare-ups of anger, even though he knows his next fight could lead to more time in lockup.New Report Finds Incarceration for ‘Status Offenses’ Still WidespreadWASHINGTON – More than half of U.S. states allow children to be detained for repeated nonviolent “status offenses” such as skipping school, running away from home or possession of alcohol, a new report says.The revelation comes more than 40 years after the landmark Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA) stipulated that in states receiving federal juvenile justice grants, no child should be locked up for such minor transgressions. They’re called status offenses because they are considered crimes owing only to a youth’s status as a juvenile.OP-ED: OJJDP’s Listenbee Is Being Unfairly CriticizedAs a retired juvenile justice professional with 20 years of experience working at the state level with OJJDP (the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention), I am surprised and appalled by recent attacks leveled by anonymous OJJDP staffers and Sen. Chuck Grassley against OJJDP Administrator Robert Listenbee.Safe Housing for Youth, Other Factors Key to Beating AddictionOne of the biggest holes in the net of services to treat teens with addictions lies not in what happens during residential treatment, but in what happens after youth leave a facility, a leading expert told a group at the Neuroscience, Treatment and Young Adults conference at Kennesaw State University Wednesday.More HeadlinesWest Virginia Eases Strict Truancy LawOP-ED: Facts, Persistence, Open Minds Lead to Legal EnlightenmentIn the Churchyard, Crosses and Memories of Fallen ChildrenFEATURED[Photos] A Tale of Two Cities “Government must focus on the needs of families, must be the protector of neighborhoods and must guard the people from the enormous power of monied interests. Now my friends, it can be done, but not by elected leaders alone. It requires average New
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