RT Article T1 Human rights and youth justice reform in England and Wales: A systemic analysis: JF Criminology & criminal justice VO 18 IS 4 SP 405 OP 430 A1 Cunneen, Chris 1953- A2 Goldson, Barry A2 Russell, Sophie LA English YR 2018 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1741327261 AB This article examines critically the persistently antagonistic relationship - across the past quarter-century - between the provisions of international human rights instruments and the nature and direction of youth justice reform in England and Wales. It introduces the core provisions of the human rights framework that pertain to youth justice and it sketches the nature and direction of policy reform over the 25-year period under scrutiny (1991-2016). To obtain a comprehensive sense of the relationship between human rights and youth justice reform in the jurisdiction, it applies a detailed systemic analysis; beginning at the point at which criminal responsibility is formally imputed and progressing through each stage of the youth justice system, up to the point where the child might ultimately be deprived of her/his liberty. By taking a ‘long-view’ of youth justice reform and by adopting a systemic end-to-end analysis of the human rights-youth justice interface, the article presents an analytical account of both change (policy reforms) and continuity (the enduring nature of human rights violations). K1 Children K1 Human rights K1 Policy reform K1 Punitiveness K1 Youth justice DO 10.1177/1748895817721957