Juvenile crime and early prevention: Promising
Transcription
Juvenile crime and early prevention: Promising
Juvenile crime and early prevention: Promising preventive practice from Estonia Anna Markina, University of Tartu, Estonia Presentation is prepared in project «Keeping Youth Away from Crime: Searching for Best European Practices». Project is implemented with financial support from the Fundamental Rights and Citizenship Programme of the European Union. Juvenile offenders registered by police rate per 10,000 of the same age population 324 280 299 290 2009 2010 304 301 2011 2012 289 255 2006 2007 2008 2013 Children referred to juvenile committees in 2012 One or several of the following sanctions may be imposed on a minor: • warning; • sanctions concerning organisation of study; • referral to a psychologist, addiction specialist, social worker or other specialist for consultation; • conciliation; • an obligation to live with a parent, foster-parent, guardian or in a family with a caregiver or in a children’s home; • community service; • surety; • participation in youth or social programs or rehabilitation service or medical treatment programs; • sending to schools for students with special needs. Getting to the service and being at the service • Juvenile committee decision: rehabilitation service as a sanction • Juvenile commission sends the resolution to the local social welfare office. • The social welfare office sends a letter of referral to the home of the family within 10 days • The juvenile’s legal guardian telephones the proper rehabilitation establishment within 21 days of receiving the letter of referral • The rehabilitation establishment asks for data and schedules the first meeting • Meetings with juvenile + legal guardian + rehabilitation team are held in order to form a rehabilitation plan • The juvenile and the family take part in counseling • Joint evaluation of the effectiveness of the service and termination of service • Feedback to juvenile committee that refferred to the service