A Legal Fix That Keeps Youths Safe



Open Society Foundations A teenager in an orange jumpsuit playing cards © William Widmer/Redux
Fixing the broken U.S. criminal justice system is no easy task. But there’s a proven policy that’s worked all over the country: treating children as children. Raising the age at which states define childhood—and diverting more teens to the youth justice system as opposed to the adult one—makes communities and young people safer, and can even save taxpayer dollars. The evidence is clear: justice reform works when we give youths a chance to grow up.

Voices

Podcast

Talking Justice: Equal Education in South Africa

Talking Justice podcast banner
In South Africa, a struggle to realize the constitutional right to education shows how activism and the law must work together to bring about a more just world.

Rights & Justice

EU Top Court Fails to Guarantee Muslim Women’s Right to Wear a Headscarf at Work

The Court of Justice of the European Union has ruled that it is not direct discrimination on grounds of religion for an employer to bar workers from wearing religious clothing.

Education & Youth

For Children with Disabilities, Global Funding for Education Falls Short

School girls sitting on the floor of a classroom
Millions of children are missing out on education because governments are not investing enough money.

Instagram

Xenophobia in South Africa

Jaafar Yuusuf Mohamed sitting in front of green and red drapes
In this week’s takeover of Open Society’s Instagram feed, photographer James Oatway examines xenophobia and anti-migrant violence in Johannesburg, South Africa.

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