Youth Justice by the Numbers

The Sentencing Project released an updated snapshot of the numbers of youth in the juvenile legal system from 2000 to 2023, finding significant declines in youth arrests and incarceration, though racial and ethnic disparities persist. The report calls for the need to continued shrinking the juvenile legal system by increasing informal or diversionary responses to youth arrests.  

Introduction: 

“Youth arrests and incarceration increased dramatically in the closing decades of the 20th century but have fallen sharply since. Public opinion often wrongly assumes that crime (and incarceration) is perpetually increasing. In fact, the 21st century has seen significant declines in both youth arrests and incarceration. Despite positive movement on important indicators, far too many youth—disproportionately youth of color—are incarcerated. Nevertheless, between 2000 and 2023, the number of youth held in juvenile justice facilities, adult prisons, and adult jails fell from 120,200 to 31,800—a 74% decline.” 

File Type: pdf
Categories: Report, Resource Library
Tags: Alternatives to Incarceration, Arrest, Black Youth, Data Collection and Analysis, Detention, Diversion, Harms of Incarceration, Latine Youth, Narrative Myths, National Analysis, Native and Indigenous Youth, Post-Adjudication Placement or Incarceration, Racial and Ethnic Disparities, Rearrest or Recidivism, Youth in Adult Facilities