How To Conduct 6.2 – 6.8
6.2–6.8 Session Guidance: Applying Juvenile Justice in Practice (From First Contact to Diversion)
Methodology and Learning Process
This block should be delivered as a visual walkthrough combined with guided discussion. The aim is to show how police apply juvenile justice safeguards in practice, step by step, whenever a child is suspected or accused of an offence. It is a practice-focused explanation supported by one visual flow chart, short discussion prompts, and clarification of police responsibilities at each stage.
Step 1: Core Visual Tool: Police Response Flow (Projector Required)
Visual Title
“Police Response When a Child Is Suspected or Accused of an Offence”
Display a single flow diagram with the following stages:
- First Contact / Arrest
- Age Assessment
- Immediate Safeguards
- Investigation (Child-Sensitive)
- Custody or Release Decision
- Diversion or Formal Process
- Referral & Follow-Up
Step-by-Step Guided Walkthrough
Step 2: First Contact / Arrest of a Child
Trainer Explanation
Explain: “The moment police believe a suspect may be under 18, juvenile justice safeguards apply.”
Key police actions:
- Treat the person as a child
- Avoid force, handcuffs or intimidation
- Ensure separation from adult suspects
Trainer Prompt
“What mistakes often happen at this stage?”
Step 2: Age Assessment of a Child
Trainer Explanation
Explain:
- Ask for B-Form, birth certificate or school record
- Record steps taken in the case diary
- If uncertain, treat as child until verified
Key Rule
Benefit of doubt always goes to the child.
Step 3: Immediate Safeguards (JJSA in Practice)
Trainer Explanation
State clearly:
Police must:
- Inform parents/guardians without delay (unless unsafe)
- Notify the Probation Officer immediately
- Explain rights in simple language
- Protect identity and privacy
- Ensure complete separation from adults
Emphasise:
“These are mandatory safeguards, not optional.”
Step 4: Child-Sensitive Investigation
Trainer Explanation
Explain:
- No coercion, pressure or confession-focused questioning
- Neutral, age-appropriate questions
- Explore whether the child acted under pressure, exploitation, andabuse or neglect
- Female officers should lead interaction with girls where possible
Step 5: Custody or Release Decision
Trainer Explanation
Explain clearly:
“Detention is a last resort.”
Police must:
- Prefer bail, warning or supervised release
- Avoid prolonged remand
- Never place children in adult lock-ups
Step 6: Diversion (Core JJSA Feature)
Trainer Explanation
Explain in simple terms:
“Diversion means correcting behaviour without formal punishment.”
Examples: warnings, probation supervision, counselling,and community-based programmes.
Emphasise:
- Strongly preferred for first-time and non-violent offences
- Police should not oppose bail mechanically
- Probation Officers guide rehabilitation
Step 7: Referral & Follow-Up
Trainer Explanation
Explain:
Police are not child-care or rehabilitation specialists and do not have the mandate or time to provide long-term support. Children must therefore be referred to the appropriate authorities.
Police should refer:
- The child to the Probation Officer
- Cases involving protection risks to the Sindh Child Protection Authority
- Link the child, where required, to Social Welfare or other support services if SCPA response is slow, inadequate or not available
and
Follow-ups:
- Follow up, where required, to ensure the child has been received and protected
- Record all referrals in the case diary
Step 8: Discussion Moment
Ask participants:
-
- “At which stage do police decisions matter most?”
- “Which step is most often skipped in practice?”
Allow brief discussion.
Step 9: Trainer Closing Note
“Juvenile justice is not about being soft. It is about being lawful, professional and effective.”
Trainer Note: Alternative Delivery Option (Video-Based)
This session may also be delivered using a short expert or explainer video on juvenile justice practice.
Suggested Method
- Play a short video explaining how police should handle a child in conflict with the law in practice
- After the video, display the Police Response Flow Chart.
- Move through the flow chart step by step, asking one question at each stage, such as:
- “What should police do first at this stage?”
- “What safeguards apply here?”
- “What mistakes often happen in practice?”
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