Strategy 10
Track 1

Improving Justice Outcomes for Indigenous Youth

Implementing an Indigenous Youth Justice Plan to ensure proactive, preventative programming can keep Indigenous youth out of the criminal justice system.

The Challenge

In BC, Indigenous youth continue to experience higher rates of incarcerations and involvement in the child welfare system. Systemic inequalities, rooted in historical and ongoing colonialism, continue to create conditions of unbelonging and disconnection for Indigenous youth and children who feel alienated and unable to access the support of their communities and families. These conditions, along with the impacts of intergenerational trauma and experiences of neglect and abuse in the child welfare system, often lead Indigenous youth down a path of increased engagement and detention within the criminal justice system. The child welfare system also neglects the distinct needs of 2S+ youth and creates conditions where they are more vulnerable to violence and discrimination.

According to the Ministry of Children and Family, Indigenous children comprise less than 10% of the child population in BC yet represent 68% of children in provincial care. The high rates of Indigenous children in care parallel the high rates of Indigenous youth in custody.

The Solution

BCFNJC will engage with First Nations, Indigenous organizations, community leaders, and service providers to develop and advance an Indigenous Youth Plan. This plan will address the conditions that keep Indigenous youth caught between the child welfare and justice system. It will advance preventive programming and supports that will support the wellbeing and welfare of Indigenous youth and free them from the “child welfare to prison pipeline.” 

Evidence suggests that child welfare is not only a pipeline to prison for Indigenous people, but is a pipeline to child exploitation, sex trafficking, and murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls. A comprehensive Youth Justice Strategy is needed to end these destructive pathways and address the root causes of the inequities Indigenous children and youth experience.

Line of Action

(1)
A
BCFNJC and BC will develop a First Nations Youth Justice Prevention and Action Plan.
Status in-progress
More info 00BCFNJC continues to work with the Ministry of Child and Family Development on youth justice matters, and resourcing for the Strategy 10 Youth Justice Plan is ongoing.

Timeline

2023–2024
Youth engagements held

Seventeen in-person and four virtual engagement sessions were completed to inform the Ministry of Children and Family Development’s Youth Justice Services Framework. Outreach included a survey and a call for stories, which focused on Indigenous youth and emerging adults who have experiences with the justice system.

April 2025
Witnessing Through Story report drafted

Following youth engagement sessions in 2023 and 2024, a What We Heard report was created to inform the Ministry of Children and Family Development’s Youth Justice Services Framework. The opportunities cited in the report will also inform BCFNJC’s youth justice plan when that work is advanced.