a presentation by the technical assistance resource center (tarc) at new mexico state university....

23
A Presentation by the Technical Assistance A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. University. Updated June 2009 Updated June 2009

Upload: jeffry-johnson

Post on 17-Dec-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University.Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University.

Updated June 2009Updated June 2009

Page 2: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

What is DMC? What is DMC?

Disproportionate Minority Contact (DMC), in this case, refers to the overrepresentation of youth of color in the juvenile justice system as compared to their proportion in the population.

Page 3: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

D-DisproportionateD-Disproportionate

A fair juvenile justice system is assumed to mean that youth of color will come into contact with the system at a rate that is proportionate to their population.

Because youth of color represent a higher proportion of those youth in the system than in a given population, their representation is disproportionate.

Page 4: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

D-DisproportionateD-Disproportionate

This means that one or two things are happening: 1) race/ethnicity is impacting treatment in the juvenile justice system, and/or 2) youth of color are committing delinquent offenses (or more serious offenses) at a rate that is also disproportionate.

Page 5: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

M-MinorityM-Minority

For purposes of DMC, the most important aspects of minority status have to do with relative power, wealth, and privilege in society rather than with the number of people who share your race or ethnicity.

There is an important difference between numerical minority (having smaller numbers in your race/ethnic category) and minority status in the distribution of power, wealth, and privilege in society.

Page 6: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

C-ContactC-Contact

Because minorities ended up being confined at rates much higher than found in the aggregate population (especially when compared to whites), historically, DMC focused on minority youth confinement.

The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 2002 broadened the DMC concept to encompass all stages of the juvenile justice process and move the focus beyond confinement.

Page 7: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

Points of ContactPoints of Contact

Arrest/Referral for intake

Referral to district attorney

Diversion

Secure pre-adjudicatory detention

Filing of petition with court

Adjudication

Disposition (probation, commitment/confinement)

Transfer to adult court 

Page 8: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

DMC NationwideDMC Nationwide

Across the nation, rates of overrepresentation increase as children go through the system.

Youth of color are disproportionately represented in all stages of the juvenile justice system in the United States.

Page 9: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

DMC in New MexicoDMC in New Mexico

50% percent of all youth in New Mexico are Latino/Hispanic followed by 34% white and 12.6% American Indian. Blacks make up 2% of the population.

Overall, minority youth of color make up 66% of the state’s population aged 10-17.

Page 10: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

DMC in New MexicoDMC in New Mexico

In 2007, minority youth of color represented:

76% of arrests of youth

78% of referrals to the Children’s Court Attorney

79% of the cases involving pre-adjudicatory detention

78% of cases with a petition filed

78% of cases with a finding of delinquency

84% of cases resulting in secure confinement at disposition

Page 11: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

Measuring DMC

What is an RRI? A means of comparing the rates of juvenile justice

contact experienced by different groups of youth. For each racial group, using a set of decision

process rates (e.g., arrest rate, juvenile court referral rate, detention rate, diversion rate, petition rate, waiver rate, adjudication rate, etc.) an RRI can be developed. By dividing one group's rate for a decision point by another group's rate at the same decision point, the relative rate (or the relative size of one rate to the other) can be calculated.

Page 12: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

All MinoritiesRelative Rate Index

2005-2008Statewide - New Mexico

1.63

1.17 1.121.03 1.02 0.96

2.00

1.39

1.62

1.171.03 1.05

0.97

1.48

0.78 0.74

0.95

0.66

1.15

0.00

0.50

1.00

1.50

2.00

2.50

Juvenile .2 Arrests

Refer to .3Juvenile Court

Cases .4 Diverted

Cases .5Involving Secure

Detention

Cases .6Petitioned

Cases .7Resulting inDelinquentFindings

Cases .8resulting inProbationPlacement

Cases .9Resulting in

Confinement in SecureJuvenile

Correctional Facilities

Cases .10Transferred to Adult Court

All Minorities 2005

All Minorities 2006

All Minorities 2007

All Minorities 2008

Page 13: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

DMC in New MexicoDMC in New Mexico

African American youth are arrested at over twice the rate of white youth, are half as likely to have their cases diverted, and are 1.5 times as likely to be referred to the district attorney for prosecution. They are more likely to experience secure confinement at disposition at a rate over 1.5 times that of white youth. African American youth are also underrepresented in cases diverted out of the system (RRI of .47).

Page 14: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

DMC in New MexicoDMC in New Mexico

Hispanic/Latino youth are arrested at almost twice the rate of white youth, are more likely to have their cases referred to the district attorney for prosecution as well as to experience secure confinement at disposition though this disparity has been decreasing. Hispanic/Latino youth are also diverted away from the system at lower rates than white youth (RRI of .80).

Page 15: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

DMC in New MexicoDMC in New Mexico

American Indian youth are much more likely to experience pre-adjudicatory secure detention than any other category of youth in the state (2.5 times more likely to be detained than white youth). Their cases are petitioned at a rate of nearly 1.5 times when compared to white youth. American Indian youth are also more likely to experience secure confinement at disposition than their white youth counterparts (nearly 1.5 times).

Page 16: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

DMC in New MexicoDMC in New Mexico

Insert tables, graphs (pie and bar).

Customize for your jurisdiction.

Page 17: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

NM County Variations NM County Variations in DMCin DMC

It is important to note that not all counties reflect what has been found for the state and that differences exist between counties.

For example, in Doña Ana County, for three consecutive years, Latino and Black youth experienced a decrease in the number of arrests, referrals, and cases resulting in secure confinement whereas American Indian youth encountered greater fluctuation.

Page 18: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

NM County Variations NM County Variations in DMCin DMC

In Bernalillo County, for three consecutive years, Latino youth were overrepresented in arrests, referrals, and number of cases resulting in confinement. Black youth, 3 percent of all youth, were overrepresented in arrests and referrals, but significant gains were made in reducing the number of cases resulting in confinement. Each year since 2005, American Indian youth have been arrested and referred to juvenile court more than previous years.

Page 19: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

National Best Practices: National Best Practices: Implications for New MexicoImplications for New Mexico

A great challenge for communities is accepting that DMC is a multi-layered problem.

Every stage of the juvenile justice processing can be affected by DMC.

Solutions?

Page 20: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

National Best Practices: National Best Practices: Implications for New MexicoImplications for New Mexico

Increasing Community-Based Detention Alternatives

Removing Decision-Making Subjectivity

Reducing Barriers to Family Involvement in the Juvenile Justice System

Page 21: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

National Best Practices: National Best Practices: Implications for New MexicoImplications for New Mexico

Cultivating State Leadership to Legislate System Level Change

Coordinate Communications between Schools & the Juvenile Justice System

Page 22: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

TARC Website TARC Website

For more information visit:

http://dmctarc.nmsu.edu

Page 23: A Presentation by the Technical Assistance Resource Center (TARC) at New Mexico State University. Updated June 2009

CreditsCredits

Photographs by The Artist Inside Program: Doing Justice to Art Education, Sara McNie Flores, M.A., Program Director & Educator

[email protected]