Looking back, the 1980s was a decade of enlightenment
and success in juvenile justice practice in this country;
diverting youngsters away from the criminal courts and
reducing the severity of response towards those who were
prosecuted did not result in crime waves or public demand
to stop this lenient treatment of the young. In the 1990s,
the whole criminal justice system took a significant turn
towards retribution and punishment. The movement may
have been aimed initially at certain groups of criminals,
particularly the persistent and serious, but swept all in its
wake, including children aged 10–14 who were neither.
There is little apparent appreciation of the damaging
consequences of this trend, not only for individual children
but also for the whole concept of childhood. There is now
a wide discrepancy between the approach taken by the
criminal and civil law towards children which current
criminal justice policies indicate is to continue into the
foreseeable future.