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WHAT IS IT?    

The Youth Justice Board is now recruiting new members to research its next topic: alternative to detention programs.  If you are passionate about justice and would like to advocate for youth in New York City, download an application today! Please note that applications are due on Friday, June 13, 2008.

Want to learn more?  Attend an information session on Wednesday, May 28 or Thursday, June 5.  Call 212-716-1365 to register! 

The Youth Justice Board brings together young people to study and propose solutions to the public safety challenges that most affect them, providing a credible voice to young people in the public debate about juvenile justice policy in New York City. Each year, a team of 15 to 20 New York City teenagers studies an important issue affecting young people in the city. At the end of the project, participants present their recommendations to key policymakers and advocate for their implementation. Members of the board participate in intensive training in research and critical thinking, developing skills and gaining leadership experience along the way. At the same time, decision-makers are provided with substantive ongoing input from a historically underrepresented group of stakeholders: well-informed youth.

In the first year, members studied the challenges of youth returning home after confinement for juvenile delinquency. The second year, the Youth Justice Board focused on safety problems in New York City high schools. In 2007, the Youth Justice Board tackled the challenges faced by youth involved in the permanency planning division of New York City Family Court. Watch the Board discuss its final report, Stand Up Stand Out: Recommendations to Improve Youth Participation in New York City's Permanency Planning Processhere.

    HOW IT WORKS

Participants in the Youth Justice Board spend months in training learning leadership and civic skills.


Application and Recruitment: Members are selected through a competitive process from a large applicant pool. Criteria for selection include interest in the topic, commitment to working on a long-term project, and willingness to work as part of a team. The board represents the diversity of New York City, and includes a wide range of skills and perspectives.

Training: Members receive intensive training, beginning with a weekend retreat in upstate New York where members participate in team-building activities and begin their exploration of the selected topic. Later training
covers research, consensus building, listening and interviewing skills, public speaking, and ‘New York
Civics 101’ to learn how policy decisions are made and implemented in New York City.


The Youth Justice Board presents its findings.

Fieldwork: The Youth Justice Board designs and implements a work plan that includes interviews, focus groups, and direct observation. The board interviews a wide range of stakeholders—professionals in the field, community members, advocates, public officials, and young people affected by the issue. Members work in
small teams to plan and conduct the interviews then compile the information from the interviews to
share with other board members. Past interview subjects have included New York City Council members,
and staff from the New York Police Department’s School Safety Division, the New York State Office of
Children and Family Services
, the New York City Department of Education, and the Legal Aid Society.
The board also runs focus groups, typically composed of young people affected by the issue being investigated.
The focus groups enable the Youth Justice Board to hear directly from a diverse collection of
young people, resulting in recommendations that genuinely reflect young people’s points of view.

Policy Recommendations: After completing their investigation, the board members explore potential solutions and develop policy recommendations. Before finalizing the recommendations, the board invites comments and constructive criticism from stakeholders, including other young people and professionals in the field. The board then issues a final report and holds a series of meetings to present its policy recommendations directly to relevant officials and policymakers; past presentations have been made to the Chancellor of the Department of Education, the New York City Criminal Justice Coordinator’s Office, the New York City Council, the New York State Assembly, and the New York City Department of Youth and Community Development.

Taking Action: After presenting its recommendations, the board develops and executes strategies to convince decisionmakers to implement their recommendations. Strategies have included advocating for their ideas directly with key agencies, implementing pilot initiatives, and building partnerships with other organizations
addressing the same topic. As a result of their advocacy, past participants have obtained seats on advisory
councils, witnessed the creation of School Safety Advisories (a recommendation of the 2005 board) and
participated in a year-long Department of Education youth focus group on school safety.

The program continues to work with and support members after their 12-month terms. Many alumni
continue to advocate implementation of the board’s recommendations. In addition, each year many
alumni remain citizen leaders, taking on leadership positions in their schools, interning with related
organizations, and pursuing civic-minded activities in their communities.

PARTNERS  
This project is supported by the W. Clement & Jessie V. Stone Foundation, Surdna FoundationW.T. Grant Foundation, Helena Rubinstein Foundation, Cricket Island Foundation, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance, and New York City Council.
  PROJECT LIST:
FEATURED PUBLICATION
Stand Up Stand Out: Recommendations to Improve Youth Participation in New York City's Permanency Planning Process  
By Members of the Youth Justice Board
Written by the 16 teenage members of the 2006-2007 Youth Justice Board, this report proposes 14 specific recommendations to improve the court experiences and outcomes for adolescents in foster care. The Youth Justice Board, which consists of New York City high schools students 15 to 19 years old, spent several months researching New York's permanency planning process—interviewing over 40 child welfare and court professionals, conducting two focus groups of youth in care and observing Family Court proceedings in Kings County, Bronx County and New York County Family Courts. 
download PDF version
 

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