Do youth curfews work?

Several southern French cities are imposing night-time curfews on unaccompanied children to reduce youth violence, which is becoming an increasingly political issue. 

This week the right-wing mayor of Béziers banned any unsupervised under-13s on the streets of three districts between 11pm and 6am. This was, said Robert Ménard, in response to “an increasing number of young minors left to their own devices” and a rise in “urban violence” – though, as The Independent pointed out, the mayor provided no figures to support this. 

Under-13s in parts of Nice will be under curfew all summer, with the mayor there warning that he would extend it to include children up to 16 years old in areas of heavy drug trafficking. A similar curfew has been imposed in other towns, as well as the most crime-ridden areas of the French-governed Caribbean archipelago, Guadeloupe.

Many towns in the Northern Territory of Australia are considering similar measures, after authorities in Alice Springs introduced a two-week curfew following “unprecedented unrest” last month, said ABC News

But civic leaders and legal experts across the world are divided on the merits of a curfew, and “how it would actually play out”.

What did the commentators say?

Emmanuel Macron‘s centrist French government has “hardened its stance on youth violence”, said The Times, to try to avert a “humiliating defeat” by Marine Le Pen’s right-wing National Rally in European parliament elections in June. Many left-wing French politicians and human rights advocates oppose curfews, but the right is “convinced” that the measures work.

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France does have a problem with young people, said Jonathan Miller in The Spectator. “Grim housing estates” that surround most French cities are “infested with drugs, gangs and unemployment”, wrote Miller, the author of the book “France: a Nation on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown”. But right-wing mayors are “desperately” resorting to curfews. Enforcement “seems likely to be problematic”. Who will be accompanying these youths? Will young people respect the curfew? And are they even the main problem? 

Last year in France, under-13s accounted for only 2% of those accused of attacking people, compared with 36% aged 30-44, according to the Ministry of the Interior.

The curfew is “an experiment”, said Ménard. But when he imposed a similar curfew in 2014, it was overruled by a court because he failed to prove the existence of particular risks relating to children under 13. 

In the US, old curfew laws in more than 400 towns “have long gone unenforced”, said The Economist. But last year, many cities – including Birmingham, Chicago and New Orleans – began “tightening their grip”, while others introduced new measures. 

There is, however, “little evidence that curfews curtail crime”. A meta-analysis by the Campbell Collaboration research network in 2016 found that curfews do not reduce crime, or juvenile victimisation. 

In fact, during curfew hours, with fewer people on the street, crime “flourished”, said The Economist. Curfews also “unduly penalise” parents who work night shifts, while shutting children inside could increase the risk of abuse. 

Youth curfews don’t keep “the neglected, the peer-pressured, the ain’t-got-nothing-to-lose kids off the street”, said Theresa Vargas in The Washington Post. But they do “increase tensions between law enforcement and young people” – especially young people of colour, because by nature, curfews “involve profiling”. 

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They also don’t tackle the very reasons children are out at night to commit crime in the first place, said Aboriginal Legal Service director Peter Collins. Many poorer homes are “dilapidated and overcrowded”. There is often drunkenness, mental illness or serious violence, and an absence of caregivers. 

“All of these issues are a product of the chronic, long-standing Aboriginal disadvantage and marginalisation” in Australia, he said. Curfews do nothing to tackle them, but are “emblematic of a government which is bereft of ideas”.

What next?

Curfews are “more symbolic than effective”, said Miller. They are popular with voters – 67% of French people believe a curfew should be introduced for minors all over the country, according to a recent poll he cited.

Curfews may make politicians look tough on crime, but enforcing them could even “distract police from more pressing matters”, said The Economist.

Ultimately, they should be treated as a short-term solution, a “circuit breaker”, University of South Australia law and criminal justice professor Rick Sarre told ABC News.

But look at the evidence, Alain Bauer, a professor of criminology, told The Times. If violence in the streets dies down after curfews are introduced, then logically, “they can be considered successful”.

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