An unprecedented study of 2.3m children has found that one in three children born between 1996 and 1999 who had experience of the care system received a youth justice caution or conviction between the ages of 10 and 17, compared with just 4% of those without experience of care.

This figure was even higher for some ethnic groups, with a total of 39% of Black Caribbean, 38% of White and Black African and 42% of White and Black Caribbean children who’d been in care involved in the youth justice system.

Of all children in the study, custodial sentences were almost twice as common among Black and Mixed ethnicity children who’d been in care compared to White children who’d been in care.

The study found that 5% of White children who’d been in care received a custodial sentence – with 9% of Black and Mixed ethnicity children who’d been in care sentenced to custody.

The research, authored by Manchester Metropolitan University and Lancaster University, is the largest ever study of its kind in England, demonstrating that children who’d been in care – and particularly those who are Black – are statistically over-represented in the criminal justice system.

The report also emphasises that high levels of youth justice involvement among children who’ve been in care are not an inevitability but a sign that somewhere along the line, they have been failed.

An Administrative Data Research UK Research Fellowship project, the study analysed new linked data from the Ministry of Justice and Department for Education. It included four cohorts of children born between 1996 and 1999, with snapshot demographic information extracted from the 2006 to 2009 educational censuses when they were aged ten, the minimum age of criminal responsibility in England and Wales.

The resulting dataset contains information for approximately 2.3m children, comprising demographic information – including gender and ethnicity- information about children’s services involvement and/or youth justice involvement. The data included 50,000 children who had experience of being in care including foster care, children’s homes and kinship care.

Based on the report findings, the authors have outlined a series of policy recommendations, including improving the availability of linked data from the justice system and other government departments, the publication of data using detailed ethnicity categories, a statutory duty on local authorities to prevent unnecessary criminalisation of children in care and care leavers, and promoting understanding across youth justice agencies of the needs of children who’ve been in care in order to improve support.

Dr Katie Hunter, Lecturer in Criminology at Manchester Metropolitan University and lead author of the study, said: “As a result of this analysis, we now know the shocking extent of criminalisation among care-experienced children in England. It also reveals what individuals working in the field have long suspected – that racially minoritised care-experienced children are especially vulnerable to youth justice involvement and imprisonment.

“Clearly, we need urgent action from government to prevent the unnecessary criminalisation of children in care and care leavers which takes account of the specific needs of minoritised groups. We also need to keep in mind that youth justice involvement among children who’ve been in care is not an inevitability. We must avoid stigmatising these children – this is about over-criminalisation and system failures.”

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