Skip to content
Government Federal, Youth

New national inquiry offers crucial opportunity to fix youth justice system failure

Justice Reform Initiative 2 mins read

The Justice Reform Initiative welcomes the announcement of a renewed Senate inquiry into Australia’s youth justice and detention systems — an essential step towards national accountability and reform for a system in crisis.

Executive Director Dr Mindy Sotiri said the inquiry, proposed by Greens Senator David Shoebridge and passed as a formal motion on Tuesday, provides a vital opportunity for Federal leadership to address decades of evidence ignored by jurisdiction after jurisdiction.

The interim report of the first Senate Inquiry into Youth Justice — handed down in February following 223 submissions and testimony from 40 witnesses — found significant and disturbing evidence about the incarceration of children in Australia and strongly recommended further consideration by the Federal Parliament.

Dr Sotiri said reinstating the inquiry is a critical step to continuing this important work. She noted that its focus on the over-incarceration of First Nations children, children’s rights, national minimum standards, and state and territory compliance with Australia’s human rights obligations underscores the seriousness of the structural issues at hand. She also welcomed the inquiry’s commitment to hear from young people who have themselves experienced incarceration.

The inquiry builds on the recommendations of National Children's Commissioner Anne Hollonds’ landmark Help Way Earlier! report, handed down in August last year, which called for transformational change that centred child well-being and national leadership.

“Years of reviews, evidence and advocacy have made it clear that the justice system for children and young people is failing. It causes significant harm; it doesn’t work to protect the community; it makes reoffending more likely and it is incredibly expensive.”

“The approach to justice policy in almost all states and territories is characterised by deeply politicised ‘tough on crime’ posturing which ignores all of the evidence about what actually works to build community safety. Far too many children are funnelled into police cells and prisons,” Dr Sotiri said.

“It is a Federal responsibility to ensure that there are systems, services and supports available to all Australian children who need help, and to ensure that the rights of the most vulnerable children are upheld.”

Data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) shows around 85% of children sentenced to detention return to custody within 12 months while more than half of all children under supervision in 2023-24 had been in detention at some point.

Dr Sotiri welcomed the inquiry’s potential to examine systemic issues including the over-incarceration of First Nations children.

“We know what works: community led diversion programs, First Nations-led place-based initiatives, bail support, education and employment pathways. These are proven to reduce offending and support children into safe, meaningful lives, but they remain chronically under-funded while billions continue to be spent managing disadvantage through imprisonment,” she said.

“We need national leadership to shift away from an over-reliance on incarceration and toward evidence-based solutions that prevent crime, support children, families, and communities and ensure taxpayer dollars are spent in ways that actually make a difference.”


About us:

The Initiative respectfully acknowledges and supports the current and longstanding efforts of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to reduce the numbers of Indigenous people incarcerated in Australia and, importantly, the leadership role which Indigenous-led organisations continue to play on this issue. We also acknowledge the work of many other individuals and organisations seeking change, such as those focused on the rate of imprisonment for women, people with mental health issues, people with disability and others.


Contact details:

Amy Price, 0437 027 156, [email protected]

More from this category

  • Government Federal
  • 12/12/2025
  • 09:41
Catholic Health Australia

Commonwealth must boost funding for public hospitals

The Commonwealth should increase its funding of public hospitals to a 50-50 share with the states and territories, Catholic Health Australia said today as health ministers meet in Brisbane. Analysis of AIHW data by Catholic Health Australia finds public hospitals are under severe pressure, leading to sliding performance in recent years. Only 67% of patients were seen on time in 2025, down from 71% in 2021. Only 53% of ED visits were completed within four hours in 2025, down from 67% in 2021. In some states, patients wait more than a year after the clinically recommended deadline for their surgery.…

  • Internet, Youth
  • 12/12/2025
  • 07:00
Monash University

4 in 5 Australian adults support social media ban for kids

With Australia’s social media ban coming into force this week, a new survey from Monash University has found that almost four out of five Australian adults support the Australian government’s social media ban for children under 16. The survey, funded by the Australian Research Council and conducted by Roy Morgan on behalf of researchers at Monash University surveyed 1,598 Australian adults, found that 79 per cent supported the ban. Support was lowest (72 per cent) among 18-24-year-olds. By contrast, 80 per cent of those aged 50-64 agreed with the ban as did 87 per cent of those 65 or older.…

  • Legal, Youth
  • 12/12/2025
  • 00:01
Law Society of NSW

Updated principles strengthen legal representation for children

Friday, 12 December 2025 Updated principles strengthen legal representation for children Lawyers representing children involved in legal proceedings now have updated resources to support…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.