Youth offending and reoffending
This problem is a UK government area of research interest (ARI) that was originally posted at https://ari.org.uk/ by a UK government organisation to indicate that they are keen to see research related to this area.
How do the regimes children receive in custody support desistance from crime on release, as well as their wider educational, personal and social development?
We want to address the causes of reoffending using personalised evidence, live data, and digital services to better target and sequence interventions. To do this we need to build the evidence base that can inform the development of more holistic measures than ‘proven reoffending’, factoring in a broader range of outcomes.
Contact details
We can be contacted at the following email address: evidence_partnerships@justice.gov.uk.
Related UKRI Projects
- How do differing rates and modes of child welfare service interventions impact upon educational and criminal justice outcomes of vulnerable children?
- Education and social care predictors of offending trajectories: An administrative data linkage study
- Socio-Emotional Characteristics in Early Childhood and Offending Behaviour in Adolescence
- Parenting Young Offenders: Shaping and Re-Shaping Social Networks following Custody
- Make Time Count Today - Reducing criminal reoffending on probation through data analytics, predictive behaviour recognition and optimised interventions
- ADR UK Data First Evaluation Fellowship
- Evaluating the long-term impact of Release on Temporary License (ROTL)
- ORA: Understanding and Preventing Youth Crime (UPYC)
- Risks, Needs and Discrimination: Examining the Fairness of Assessment and Planning Frameworks for Youth Justice Interventions
- Making sense of youth justice: a comparative study of Italy and Wales