AUSTRALIA'S YOUTH JUSTICE SYSTEM IS IN CRISIS
Every day, children as young as 10 are locked in cells, restrained, isolated and held in conditions that breach international human rights law. Many have not been convicted of any crime and most are on remand, detained because the system has failed to provide safe, community-based alternatives.
Indigenous children bear the brunt of this crisis. They are around 29 times more likely to be imprisoned than non-Indigenous children and make up the majority of children in detention nationwide, according to data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.
This is not the result of higher offending, but of systemic over-policing, denial of early support and a punitive system that punishes vulnerability.
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Locking up children does not make communitiessafer
In Australia, children are being routinely subjected to seriously harmful practices including solitary confinement, spit hoods and detention in adult watch houses. These practices cause severe physical and psychological damage and, in some cases, meet the threshold of torture under international law.
This harm comes at an extreme cost.
Australia spends more than $1 billion each year locking up children, with detention costing well over $1 million per child per year in some jurisdictions. These funds are poured into cages and control instead of housing, healthcare, disability support and community-led programs that are proven to prevent harm and keep children safe.
Locking up children does not make communities safer. It entrenches trauma, increases reoffending and violates Australia’s obligations to protect children’s rights, dignity and wellbeing. This is not an inevitable crisis. It is the result long-standing government failures – but there is a better way forward.
Why Amnesty International Australia?
We have the independence, reach and credibility to take on this crisis. We are not reliant on government funding and can speak out without fear or compromise.
Our Indigenous Rights team works closely with communities and Parliament to ensure lived experience is centred. We have a proven track record of mobilising supporters and sustaining long-term Indigenous justice campaigns, and we use international human rights law not as theory, but as a tool for accountability.
OUR VISION
We're advocating for a youth justice system that protects children rather than harms them.
Our vision is to raise the age of criminal responsibility to at least 14 in the Northern Territory, Queensland and Victoria and to end the use of torturous practices against children nationally by 2030. This includes banning spit hoods, solitary confinement and the detention of children in adult watch houses.
Children are not 'problems' to be managed. Every young person has potential, dignity and the capacity to grow when met with care, safety and support. The system should help children take responsibility and learn from their actions, not deepen trauma.
Learn moreSafer and supported children createsafer communities
We believe in a society that recognises children as its future and takes responsibility for creating the conditions in which they can flourish.
Under international human rights law, Australia must act in the best interests of the child and use detention only as a measure of last resort. This requires systems that respond with care and accountability, not punishment.
Evidence consistently shows that when children are supported through community-led, preventative responses, harm is reduced and long-term safety improves for everyone.
This is the youth justice system we are working toward: grounded in community leadership, where children are supported to thrive and society is made safer.
CloseTHE BARRIERS TO ACHIEVING OUR VISION
Why does this keep happening?
- Punitive politics
- Lack of accountability
- Systemic racism
- Public invisiblity
Punitive politics
Youth justice policy is being driven by fear-based rhetoric rather than evidence. ‘Tough on crime’ approaches prioritise punishment over prevention despite decades of research showing they increase reoffending and harm.
Lack of accountability
There is a profound power imbalance in the youth justice system. Children are scrutinised and punished while institutions and individuals responsible for abuse face little consequence. Oversight mechanisms are weak and fragmented across states.
Systemic racism
Indigenous children are over-policed, criminalised earlier and detained more often. This over-representation is not accidental. It reflects the ongoing impact of colonisation, discrimination and chronic underinvestment in Indigenous-led solutions.
Public invisibility
When abuse happens behind closed doors, it is easier for governments to deny, minimise or delay action. Without sustained public pressure, meaningful reform does not occur.
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THE SOLUTION
This is what needs to change:
- We must raise the age of criminal responsibility to at least 14 years old
- End torturous practices
- Enforce minimum human rights standards
- Invest in what works
Raise the age
No child under 14 should be subjected to the criminal justice system. This is the clear position of the United Nations and global human rights bodies.
End torturous practices
Spit hoods, solitary confinement, police cages and detention in adult watch houses must end. These practices breach international law and cause serious physical and psychological harm.
National standards
Australia needs a National Youth Justice Framework that sets enforceable minimum human rights standards, strengthens oversight and ensures consistency across states and territories.
Invest in what works
Long-term funding must be directed to Indigenous-led diversion, early intervention and prevention programs. These programs keep children out of the justice system and make communities safer.
CloseYOUR ACTIVISM MATTERS
Australia's youth detention system is in crisis, but we're fighting for change and we need your help.
Campaigns like ours can only get so far with political advocacy. Real change happens when we build a groundswell of people power - to raise public awareness and show the government that there are people around the country who are ready for change.
This is when real policy change and law reforms happens - because huge numbers of constituents have called for it.
Our Activist Resource Hub is where you'll find up-to-date toolkits, downloads and other information that will support you to campaign on Youth Justice in your local area.
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We’re gearing up for the launch of our new Youth Justice Campaign, and there will be loads of opportunities for you to take action along the way!
Stay tuned for more fun ways you can get involved and help us call for much-needed change.
Take Action Now
BECOME A HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDER TODAY
Your regular gift can help end the overrepresentation of Indigenous children in prisons and fund vital work for First Nations justice.



