Neurodivergence, SEND and the Youth Justice System

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A digital download from this Youth Justice Special Interest Group. Children with SEND (special educational needs and disabilities) and those...
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A digital download from this Youth Justice Special Interest Group.

Children with SEND (special educational needs and disabilities) and those defined as ‘neurodivergent’ are over-represented in the English and Welsh youth justice system, and face a number of challenges as they navigate their way through the education, public healthcare and youth justice systems. This paper empirically examines this neglected area of criminal justice involvement in young lives.

The research findings suggest that both the education and youth justice systems in England and Wales are disabling and criminalising through processes that, often unintentionally; label, stigmatise, isolate, neglect and harm neurodivergent children. Consideration turns, in the concluding section of the paper, to some emerging best practice and recommendations for reform.

About the video:

Video length: 119 minutes

Featuring: Dr Anne-Marie Day, AoCPP staff and event delegates.

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What our members say

It has improved my knowledge and understanding about the range of harms caused to children and their impact as I have been able to network with a wide range of experts from the UK and beyond. There is no other multidisciplinary association for child protection professionals focused on learning to support and improve practice and policy

Professor John Devaney MBE. Social Worker, Senior Lecturer in Social Work, Edinburgh University, Edinburgh.
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