The Road to Hell: When Youth Justice Efforts Backfire
The Iatrogenic Problem in Youth Justice
The Iatrogenic Problem in Youth Justice
Queensland's "Tough on Crime" Approach
Media's Role in Fuelling the Crisis
An Evidence-Based Way Forward
Avoiding the Road to Iatrogenic Hell
The road to hell is paved with good intentions, as the saying goes. This rings particularly true when it comes to youth justice policies and interventions aimed at curbing juvenile crime. All too often, well-meaning efforts to "get tough" on youth offenders or provide rehabilitative services end up doing more harm than good – a phenomenon known as iatrogenics.Iatrogenics refers to when an intervention, treatment or policy causes unintended harm or negative consequences that outweigh any potential benefits. The term is derived from the Greek iatros, meaning "healer" or "physician", highlighting how even those with the best of intentions can inadvertently make a situation worse.This appears to be playing out in the youth justice crisis currently gripping Queensland. In a reactionary bid to crack down on youth crime, the state government has introduced a raft of harsh measures, including:
These "tough on crime" policies fly in the face of overwhelming evidence that detaining children, especially in adult facilities, is profoundly damaging and increases the likelihood of future offending.
By pursuing a punitive approach focused on incarceration rather than addressing root causes, the Queensland government risks inflicting serious iatrogenic harm.
Part of the problem lies in how youth crime narratives are being shaped and amplified by sensationalistic media coverage. As the research shows, regular negative stereotyping and disproportionate focus on youth offending can be profoundly alienating for young people.
It creates a vicious cycle of stigmatisation, alienation and anti-social behaviour. The media frequently fails to provide nuance or context around complex social issues that contribute to youth offending, such as poverty, trauma, mental illness and lack of community support services.
Instead, the narrative becomes one of moral panic demanding harsh crackdowns on a perceived "youth crime wave."This plays right into the hands of political opportunists seeking tough-on-crime bona fides, regardless of whether their policies are evidence-based or likely to be effective in the long run. As long as the media drives this punitive narrative, it becomes easier for governments to pursue iatrogenic interventions that may be politically popular but ultimately make things worse.
The better path forward, as highlighted by numerous experts and human rights bodies, is to prioritise preventative, rehabilitative and diversionary approaches aimed at addressing root causes and keeping kids out of the criminal justice system wherever possible.
This could include:
Ultimately, we must resist the urge for quick-fix "solutions" driven by moral panic and political pointscoring. When it comes to complex social issues like youth crime, naive interventionism often does more harm than good in the long run. By taking an evidence-based, preventative approach focused on addressing root causes, we have a much better chance of improving community safety while protecting the rights and wellbeing of vulnerable young people.The alternative is to keep traveling further down the road of iatrogenic policies - a road that is indeed paved with good intentions, but ultimately leads to a hell of unintended consequences.
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