There are no simple answers for adolescent reentry adolescents.
Many of them shouldn't have been forced to go through it to begin with, as they were sent to juvenile lockup facilities for status offenses.
I've done a great deal of work with reentry teens, and have found that it usually takes a good month or longer to deinstitutionalize them. They're essentially experiencing shell shock as they come back from a very rigid environment where they are literally told when they can eat, have bathroom usage, get phone calls that are observed and read mail that was meant for their eyes, but has been already opened and read by others. They are ill prepared for the outside world, and with each day they are incarcerated it takes that much longer to adjust to their newly found freedom.
[For more of this story, written by Jackie Ross, go to http://jjie.org/mentor-live-in...young-people/344203/]
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