
With more than 2,000 children in custody, stubbornly high reoffending rates and millions of pounds spent on incarcerating children each year, it is often frustrating to observe the constant churn of policies based on knee-jerk responses and political point-scoring rather than evidence-based best practice. Restorative justice is the most effective tool the criminal justice system does not use. Evidence shows that both children and victims benefit, and that every £1 invested in restorative justice saves £8 in reduced reoffending rates.
Just Care recognises the benefits of restorative justice as well as the complex needs and behaviours of the children in these settings. With 71 per cent of children in custody having been in the care of or in contact with social services, author Belinda Hopkins' transfer of emphasis from restorative justice to restorative approaches, which highlight the benefits of proactive behaviour reinforcement rather than just using it as a reactive intervention, is most welcome.
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