This conference was held in Central London in January
1998 and organised jointly by The British Juvenile and
Family Courts Society (BJFCS) and The National Association for
the Care and Resettlement of Offenders, at
which the keynote speaker was The Rt. Hon. Jack Straw
MP, the Home Secretary. Important contributions were
also made by no fewer than nine members of the
Government's Task Force set up in May last year to
examine the future of the Youth Courts — a task which, in
my opinion as a Youth Court magistrate since 1978 and
past chairman of the BJFCS, was ripe for attention. The
conference was attended by 300 delegates representing a
wide range of professionals involved with young people
and the courts.
The Home Secretary's opening words emphasised both
the timeliness, in view of the Crime and Disorder Bill
going through Parliament, and the importance of the
conference because of the widely held view that the system
was failing. In addition a consultation process was taking
place to look at longer-term reform of the Youth Court.
The Home Secretary spelled out that too little is done
when children start to offend to ‘intervene positively’ in
their lives; repeat cautions are used ineffectively; re-offending continues on bail; and there is a lack of
supervised community-based programmes aimed at making young
people take responsibility for their behaviour,
make amends, and change. He drew attention to the
disjointed system of both custodial facilities and orders
that need to be overhauled. Finally he pointed out that
there is a lack of a national strategy.