@article{56020686febf41b5bb87a92db4034e8a,
title = "Identifying and responding to young people with cognitive disability and neurodiversity in Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand youth justice systems",
abstract = "Many young people in the criminal justice systems of both Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand will have cognitive disabilities and neurodiversity, and substantial challenges arise in efforts to provide services that will adequately meet their needs. This is despite the introduction of funding models based on an assessment of individual needs (rather than block funding to organisations). In this narrative scoping review, we argue that justice agencies will need to partner with specialist disability support services if they are to meet the needs of those in both custodial and community settings. This requires knowledge of the nature and prevalence of disability in the youth justice population, awareness of available service responses and the development of skills to engage young people in services and programmes that will support rehabilitation and community inclusion.",
keywords = "cognitive disability, disability, forensic disability, intellectual disability, National Disability Insurance Scheme, neurodevelopmental disability, prevalence, young offenders, youth justice",
author = "Keith McVilly and Molly McCarthy and Andrew Day and Astrid Birgden and Catia Malvaso",
note = "Funding Information: In Australia, PBS is specifically funded through the NDIS, enabling the engagement of Behaviour Support Practitioners to assist families and staff to work with clients in improving quality of life and developing adaptive replacement skills. So too in New Zealand, the provision of PBS has been funded by the Ministry of Health for all persons eligible for disability support services (New Zealand Ministry of Health, ). However, a PBS model does not appear to have been well integrated into juvenile detention centres in Australia (e.g. there is no mention in the Youth Justice Strategic Plan 2020–2030 for Victoria) or Aotearoa New Zealand, even though PBS can be equally applied as a strength-based approach to behaviours of concern exhibited by both disabled and non-disabled young people. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 The Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1080/13218719.2022.2124548",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "789--811",
journal = "Psychiatry, Psychology and Law",
issn = "1321-8719",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "6",
}