Juvenile Court Judges’ Commission Releases Report on Young Offenders

HARRISBURG – The Juvenile Court Judges’ Commission has announced the release of Pennsylvania’s Juvenile Justice Recidivism Report, the first such comprehensive study conducted regarding young offenders in the state.

Recidivism, for the purposes of this study, is defined as a subsequent delinquency adjudication or conviction in criminal court for either a misdemeanor or felony offense within two years of case closure.

The study was designed to create a recidivism benchmark against which to measure the effectiveness of Pennsylvania’s Juvenile Justice System Enhancement Strategy (JJSES), which seeks to employ evidence-based practices at every stage of the juvenile justice process, to collect and analyze the data necessary to measure the results of these efforts, and, with this knowledge, to improve the quality of decisions, services and programs throughout the juvenile justice system.

The core premise of the JJSES is that recidivism rates can be reduced through the implementation of evidence-based practices.

The report comes with a note of caution not to compare recidivism rates of individual counties or individual service providers due to the impact of expunged cases and varying risk assessment practices across the state during the period of the study.

The report was developed using juvenile court data received from county juvenile probation departments through the Commission’s Pennsylvania Case Management System, as well as criminal court conviction data provided by the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts.

Some of the major findings from the report include:

The study was supported with funding from the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency and the Stoneleigh Foundation Emerging Leader Fellowship Program.

To view the full report, please visit www.jcjc.state.pa.us.

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