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Preventing Homelessness for System‐Involved Youth
Authors:Linda Britton  Lisa Pilnik
Abstract:Too many youth and young adults find themselves on the streets, couch‐surfing with friends, in emergency shelters or worse, after exiting the child welfare and juvenile justice systems. In some circumstances, youth have had court hearings until their exit from the legal system, but those hearings have not focused on long‐range plans of youth and emergencies youth may encounter. In other circumstances, there has been little or no planning prior to discharge, especially for young people who leave the juvenile justice system. Courts can and should prevent, alleviate or end youth homelessness for youth who appear before them through strategies that are enumerated in the recently‐passed NCJFCJ resolution. This article expounds on three of these strategies – coordinating transition and re‐entry plans, insisting on effective legal representation of youth, and utilizing sound judicial leadership. It also describes the concurrent efforts of the Coalition for Juvenile Justice and the American Bar Association's Homeless Youth Legal Network to remove legal barriers and improve outcomes for youth and young adults experiencing homelessness.
Keywords:juvenile  homeless  youth  legal needs  issues  barriers  transition  outcome  education  employment  civil  criminal  records  disproportionate  child welfare  juvenile justice     LGBTQ     legal services  legal assistance  representation  judicial   leadership  discharge  resources  juvenile court  mental health  housing  re‐entry  planning
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