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Alternatives to Detention and Confinement

Literature Review: A product of the Model Programs Guide
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Description

When a youth who commits an offense comes to the attention of the juvenile justice system (that is, law enforcement, the courts, or other decisionmakers), there are several ways decisionmakers can respond. In juvenile court, responses can include legal or mandated options, such as secure detention, secure confinement, transfer to the adult system, probation supervision, community-based programs, or nonsecure residential programs (Hockenberry and Puzzanchera, 2023). The court also has the option to provide the youth with interventions that are not formally mandated (Hockenberry and Puzzanchera, 2023). 

Generally, the purposes of secure detention are to ensure that a youth appears for all court hearings and to protect the community from future offending while the youth awaits court decisions and dispositional placement (Clark, 2014; Puzzanchera et al., 2022a). Most of the youths in secure detention are in detained status, which means they are being held while awaiting adjudication, disposition, transfer to adult court, or other court decisions (Puzzanchera et al., 2022b).

In contrast, a youth who is in the confined or committed population has been placed in a residential facility as part of a court-ordered disposition. Many of these youths are securely confined in long-term secure facilities or other types of residential programs. They have been adjudicated for a delinquency offense in court and, as part of their disposition, they have been sent to a secure residential program (Austin, Johnson, and Weitzer, 2005; Puzzanchera, Sladky, and Kang, 2023a). These residential programs are usually designed to address the factors related to offending and to prevent recidivism (Clark, 2014; Griffis et al., 2014).

Researchers have identified several negative outcomes for youths held in secure detention or confinement (e.g., Apel and Sweeten, 2010; Caudill et al., 2013; Gilman and Hawkins, 2015; Gilman et al., 2021; Ryan, Abrams, and Huang, 2014; Walker and Herting, 2020). Thus, alternatives have been developed (Austin, Johnson, and Weitzer, 2005; Chamberlain, Leve, and DeGarmo, 2007). Community-based alternatives to secure detention and secure confinement are used to prevent youths from being placed outside of their homes. Residential alternatives include group homes, shelters, and residential treatment centers. These options often offer a residential placement without the secure environment or with enhanced treatment offerings. What is considered an alternative varies by jurisdiction. 

The purpose of this literature review is to examine interventions that have been developed or used to replace secure detention or confinement. For more information on other types of diversion programs, please see the Diversion From Formal Juvenile Court Processing literature review.  
 

Last Update: February 2024