Juvenile Law Center

Juvenile and Criminal Justice|Education

Aftercare and Re-Entry

Few states, including Pennsylvania, adequately prepare youth returning from placement for re-entry into the community. For example, many youth struggle to return to school and many never receive a high school diploma. A 2006 Philadelphia study prepared for Project U-Turn revealed that 90 percent of youth returning from a delinquency placement fail to graduate from high school. All too often, these youth also lack the tools necessary to join the work force. There is frequently little connection between the “treatment” they receive in care and the acquisition of skills they need to succeed in the community.

Since 2004, Juvenile Law Center has served as the Lead Entity for the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Models for Change initiative in Pennsylvania, which has targeted aftercare reform in the state. We worked with Pennsylvania juvenile justice leaders to develop the Joint Policy Statement on Aftercare. Adopted by key state agencies in January 2005, the Joint Policy Statement has since become a primary organizing tool for Models for Change reform efforts, converting aspirations into policy and practice. We have convened and contributed to workgroups statewide addressing aftercare and have worked with stakeholders from the courts, education system, probation, and other juvenile justice practitioners. We coordinate reform efforts at the state and county levels and connect those efforts to the broader national initiative.

The 2005 Joint Policy Statement on Aftercare defined aftercare/re-entry as “beginning at disposition.” Signaling a major change in practice for the system, this definition recognizes the need to connect aftercare services and supports to the programs available to youth while in placement. This early focus on re-entry and continuity is key to ensuring that youth develop the skills they need to become productive members of their communities when they return home.

Many older Pennsylvania youth who leave delinquency placements return to the child welfare system or enter it for the first time. For these youth, aftercare services are linked closely to transition planning for foster youth.  

Juvenile Law Center aims to improve aftercare/re-entry services and supervision so that every youth in residential placement has a chance to succeed after his or her release from care.

 

Last updated December 2011