Child Imprisonment in England and Wales: The Case for Abolition

Child Imprisonment in England and Wales: The Case for Abolition
By Jodie Hodgson

England and Wales imprison more children than any other country in Western Europe despite overwhelming evidence that custody harms rather than helps. The average child custody population in 2023–24 was 430, with nearly half held on remand. These children, often already traumatised, face environments rife with violence, isolation and neglect.

Recent figures reveal a stark picture: incidents of self-harm among children in custody rose by 119% in a year, while assaults between young people and against staff also increased. The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (2022) found that in over 60% of reported cases, staff were the perpetrators of sexual abuse in youth custodial institutions. These are not isolated incidents, they are systemic failures.

Institutions like Medway and Rainsbrook Secure Training Centres have closed following revelations of widespread abuse and unsafe conditions. Yet the state continues to invest in new “secure schools”, a rebranding of child prisons rather than a rethink of their necessity.

Reform is no longer enough. True change requires abolition, the closure of all child prisons and investment in community-based alternatives. These must tackle the root causes of criminalisation: poverty, trauma, lack of education, and underfunded mental health services.

Children need care, not cages. Ending child imprisonment isn’t radical,  it’s humane.

Read the full story

The View Magazine

Recent Posts

Literature That Transforms: How Stories Illuminate the Realities of Imprisonment

What can a metamorphosing beetle and a kidnapped art student teach us about the lived…

17 hours ago

Unequal Access, Uneven Outcomes: How Interventional Radiology Could Address Gender Inequity in Cancer Care

By 2040, more than six million people in England could face a cancer diagnosis; that’s…

3 days ago

How Prison Leave For Prisoners is being abused by Governors

Release on temporary licence (RoTL) for women in prison is supposed to be part of…

3 days ago

Prison Shouldn’t Be a Death Sentence: Cancer and Cruelty Behind Bars

Prison is meant to take away freedom, not life itself. Yet for many women behind…

4 days ago

Ofcom: Women need to be better protected online

As vigils were held across the country for all those who have suffered gendered and…

4 days ago

“Full of Practicality and Humanity”: Judith Moran on 150 Years of Quaker Social Action

Some organisations claim to be rooted in community. Quaker Social Action actually is, and has…

5 days ago

This website uses cookies.