Last week we told the story of Bridges Reentry, a small nonprofit dedicated to helping formerly incarcerated females successfully reenter society after they had paid their debt to society. This week we'll be looking at why women end up incarcerated in the first place, and what School Counselors are doing to help them avoid involvement with the juvenile justice system.
Girls have historically been less likely than boys to become involved in the juvenile justice system, especially at the “deeper end” of the system involving secure residential placement (incarceration) and transfer to adult court. The arrest rate for girls peaked in 1996 at 4,030 arrests per 100,000 girls. This rate declined to about 3,400 arrests per 100,000 girls from 2000 through 2008 and then began to drop again. By 2020 the juvenile arrest rate for girls was 756 per 100,000 girls.
In 2020, girls accounted for 44 percent of the estimated 57,700 juvenile court status offense caseload. Status offenses are acts that are illegal because the persons committing them are of juvenile status (e.g., truancy, running away from home, curfew violations). When looking only at the status offense cases involving girls, 59 percent were for truancy, 14 percent were for running away, 10 percent were for liquor law violations, 8 percent were for ungovernability, 3 percent were for curfew violations, and 5 percent were listed as miscellaneous.
As girls mature through adolescence, they face an increased chance of experiencing risk factors for gang involvement that often leads to an increase in the severity of offenses. While the types of delinquent acts that girls in gangs commit are often less severe than boys, their involvement with gangs is still a concern and demands unique prevention, response, and rehabilitation efforts. Research on this topic has identified key factors that are significantly correlated with girls’ delinquency leading to gang involvement:
Education social workers who work as "guidance counselors" in high schools have identified the following positive environmental factors that can help dissuade eventual female gang involvement:
Education social workers (now known as "school counselors" rather than the outdated term "guidance counselor") report that early involvement and positive intervention are the key to preventing young girls from falling into gang involvement and graduating from status offenders to felons. School Counselors are no longer simply reacting to problems that students bring to them but rather are establishing proactive programs that are designed to serve not only female, but all students. Modern school counselor programs are:
This kind of Early intervention remains the key to success.