Skip to main content

'Help way earlier!' How Australia can transform child justice to improve safety and wellbeing

Read evidence-based recommendations to transform Australia's child justice system and improve safety and wellbeing outcomes for young people involved in the

Children and youth rights Project 23 May 2025

Summary

How Australia can transform child justice to improve safety and wellbeing

'Help way earlier!' How Australia can transform child justice to improve safety and wellbeing

Children and youth rights
Project

About the report

Our report 'Help way earlier!’ How Australia can transform child justice to improve safety and wellbeing, looks at the rights of children at risk of or in contact with the justice system.

It recommends evidence-based, national reforms to:

  • protect the human rights of children
  • reduce child offending
  • keep communities safe.

It centres the voices of children and their families, and their views on how to improve child wellbeing and prevent children's contact with the justice system.

Tragically, by not addressing their human rights early on, and instead taking a punitive approach to their offending, we are essentially criminalising some of the most vulnerable children in Australia.

Former National Children's Commissioner Anne Hollonds

All documents

'Help way earlier!' How Australia can transform child justice to improve safety and wellbeing

Full report

'Help way earlier!' How Australia can transform child justice to improve safety and wellbeing

Executive summary

About the report 'Help way earlier!'

Easy read version

Recommendations to make the justice system better

Easy read version

Child-friendly video by former National Children's Commissioner

About the report

The treatment of children in the criminal justice system, some as young as 10 years old, is one of the most urgent human rights issues facing Australia today. Many reviews and investigations over the years have shown serious problems and repeated failures in our child justice systems.

Vulnerable children and their families told us they need “help way earlier.”

Key findings of the report:

  • Many children in contact with child justice systems have experiences of poverty, violence and abuse, intergenerational trauma, mental health issues, homelessness, drug and alcohol abuse and neurodevelopmental disabilities.
  • Many are in the child protection systems or living in out-of-home care.
  • If children at risk are supported earlier on - whether in the community, in detention, or when released from detention – they are less likely to be involved in criminal activity, keeping them and our communities safe.

Report methodology

The report is based on submissions, interviews and consultations involving hundreds of stakeholders across Australia.

We spoke with 150 children and young people who are, have been or are at risk of contact with the child justice system.

Other contributors were:

  • family and community members
  • youth justice departments
  • police
  • judicial officers
  • First Nations organisations
  • state and territory children’s commissioners and guardians
  • academics
  • relevant NGOs.

You can read the submissions.

Statistics from the report

  • On an average day, 4542 children across Australia were under youth justice supervision.
  • 80% in detention were unsentenced.
  • 57% were Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children
  • Indigenous children were 23 times more likely to be under supervision and 28 times more likely to be in detention than non-Indigenous children
  • About 85% of children released from supervised detention return to sentenced supervision within 12 months.
  • Children from the lowest socio-economic areas are 7 times more likely to be under supervision than children from the highest socio-economic areas.

Recommendations for reform


The Australian government should:

  • establish a national taskforce for reform of child justice systems
  • appoint a Cabinet Minister for Children
  • legislate a National Children’s Act incorporating the Convention on the Rights of the Child and a Human Rights Act
  • establish a Ministerial Council for Child Wellbeing
  • position children at the centre of policymaking and service delivery
  • empower First Nations children, families and communities
  • optimise community-based action
  • build a capable and child-specialised workforce
  • base systems on data and evidence
  • embed accountability for the rights of children.

Evidence-based approaches to reforming child justice systems

Evidence-based approaches to child justice

Released in October 2025, this supplement to our landmark 'Help way earlier!' report on child justice reform contains 6 case studies from Australia and around the world that are examples of evidence-based approaches to reforming child justice systems.

Support services

More on children's rights:

You might also like

Evidence-based approaches to child justice

Children and youth rights
Report
30 October 2025

Submissions - ‘Help way earlier!’

Children and youth rights
Submission by the Commission
9 July 2024

Supporting quality engagement with children

Children and youth rights
Report
21 May 2026

Improving the safety and wellbeing of vulnerable children

Children and youth rights
Report
14 June 2024

For children and young people

Children and youth rights
Article
21 April 2026

Guides for people who've experienced discrimination

Human rights
Guide
15 November 2025

What are children and youth rights?

Children and youth rights
Article
14 April 2026

Children, youth rights and the law

Children and youth rights
Article
15 November 2025

Guides, statistics and facts about children and youth rights

Children and youth rights
Statistics
15 November 2025

---Child-friendly pages---

Children and youth rights
15 November 2025

For children and young people

Children and youth rights
Article
21 April 2026

Have a question about discrimination or sexual harassment? Want to know more about human rights? Contact us if you need help.

Contact us
Subscribe to our mailing list to join a community of human rights advocates, and stay in the loop about our latest updates.