As I explained to Harmony I'm comparing research and how governments treat incarcerated youth because for all intents and purposes the facilities like West Ridge not only sound no better, they actually sound worse as far as treatment goes.
The following link discusses the negative affects on youth from being incarcerated...I took out relevant portions to quote.
http://www.justicepolicy.org/images/upload/06-11_REP_DangersOfDetention_JJ.pdf[quote]Congregating delinquent youth together negatively affects their behavior
and increases their chance of re-offending
Behavioral scientists are finding that bringing youth together for treatment or services
may make it more likely that they will become engaged in delinquent behavior. Nowhere
are deviant youth brought together in greater numbers and density than in detention
centers, training schools, and other confined congregate “care” institutions.
Researchers at the Oregon Social Learning Center found that congregating youth
together for treatment in a group setting causes them to have a higher recidivism
rate and poorer outcomes than youth who are not grouped together for treatment.
The researchers call this process “peer deviancy training,” and reported statistically
significant higher levels of substance abuse, school difficulties, delinquency, violence,
and adjustment difficulties in adulthood for those youth treated in a peer group setting.
The researchers found that “unintended consequences of grouping children at-risk
for externalizing disorders may include negative changes in attitudes toward antisocial
behavior, affiliation with antisocial peers, and identification with deviancy.”12
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Detention can slow or interrupt
the natural process of “aging out of delinquency”
Many young people in fact engage in “delinquent” behavior, but despite high
incarceration rates, not all youth are detained for delinquency. Dr. Delbert Elliott,
former President of the American Society of Criminology and head of the Center for
the Study of the Prevention of Violence has shown that as many as a third of young
people will engage in delinquent behavior17 before they grow up but will naturally “age
out” of the delinquent behavior of their younger years. While this rate of delinquency
among young males may seem high, the rate at which they end their criminal behavior,
(called the “desistance rate”) is equally high.18 Most youth will desist from delinquency
on their own. For those who have more trouble, Elliott has shown that establishing
a relationship with a significant other (a partner or mentor) as well as employment
correlates with youthful offenders of all races “aging out” of delinquent behavior as
they reach young adulthood.
Whether a youth is detained or not for minor delinquency has lasting ramifications for
that youth’s future behavior and opportunities. Carnegie Mellon researchers have shown
that incarcerating juveniles may actually interrupt and delay the normal pattern of “aging
out” since detention disrupts their natural engagement with families, school, and work.19
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WSIPP found that, for every dollar spent on county juvenile detention systems, $1.98 of
“benefits” in terms of reduced crime and costs of crime to taxpayers was achieved. By
sharp contrast, diversion and mentoring programs produced $3.36 of benefits for every
dollar spent, aggression replacement training produced $10 of benefits for every dollar
spent, and multi-systemic therapy produced $13 of benefits for every dollar spent. Any
inefficiencies in a juvenile justice system that concentrates juvenile justice spending on
detention or confinement drains available funds away from interventions that may be
more effective at reducing recidivism and promoting public safety.
Given the finding by the Journal of Qualitative Criminology that the cost of a youth
offender’s crimes and incarceration over their lifetime (including adult) can cost as much
as $1.7 million,45 a front-end investment in interventions proven to help young people
would seem to be more effective public safety spending.
A better future: invest juvenile justice funds in programs proven to work
If detention reform is successful, communities should be able to reinvest the funds once
spent on detention beds and new detention centers in other youth-serving systems, or
other interventions proven to reduce recidivism.
The Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence, the Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention, the Washington State Institute for Public Policy, and a plethora
of other research institutes have shown that several programs and initiatives are proven
to reduce recidivism and crime in a cost-effective matter. Some common elements in
proven programs include:
• Treatment occurs with their family, or in a family-like setting
• Treatment occurs at home, or close to home
• Services are delivered in a culturally respectful and competent manner
• Treatment is built around the youth and family strengths
• A wide range of services and resources are delivered to the youth, as well as their
families. Most of these successful programs are designed to serve the needs of youth in family-
like settings, situated as close to home as possible with services delivered in a culturally
sensitive and competent manner.
These proven programs identify the various aspects of a youth—their strengths and
weaknesses as well as the strengths and resources of their families and communities.
Progress is based on realistic outcomes and carefully matches the particular needs of the
youth and family to the appropriate intervention strategy.