JOINT STATEMENT
Thursday 7 August 2025
An alliance of legal and community experts say a Coalition bill calling for tougher child bail laws will backfire and increase crime.
The NSW Coalition tabled a draconian bill which proposes to deny bail to exponentially more children – including those accused of property damage, shoplifting and other forms of ‘survival crime’. The bill would also mandate electronic monitoring for children as young as 14 and prohibit courts from granting bail again if police decide to lay more charges, even if they can’t be proven.
If passed, this bill would increase crime and make communities more dangerous.
Child prisons are an express training program for a life of crime and suffering.
Throwing more children in jail is compounding disadvantage and trauma, leading to horrific outcomes for communities.
The evidence is crystal clear that locking a child up makes them dramatically more likely to offend and return to prison in the future.
Locking kids up has never worked, anywhere.
Instead, legal and crime experts want an evidence-based plan to strengthen communities and prevent crime in the first place:
- Long-term and sustainable funding for community services that prevent crime and ensure children and families thrive;
- Strengthen diversion and invest in community-led alternatives to criminal justice responses, like alternative responders;
- Meaningful partnerships between communities, police and other justice stakeholders to respond to local needs and keep all members of our communities safe.
Signed by:
- Aboriginal Legal Service (NSW/ACT) Limited
- Aboriginal Health & Medical Research Council of NSW (AH&MRC)
- AbSec - NSW Child, Family and Community Peak Aboriginal Corporation
- First Peoples Disability Network (FPDN)
- Link-Up NSW
- NSW Aboriginal Education Consultative Group (AECG)
- Justice and Equity Centre
- The Shopfront Youth Legal Centre
- Redfern Legal Centre
- Justice Reform Initiative
- Australian Lawyers for Human Rights
- Community Legal Centres NSW
- NSW Council for Civil Liberties
- Weave Youth & Community Services
- Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation
- National Justice Project
- Deadly Connections
- SNAICC
- Network of Alcohol and Other Drugs Agencies
- Western Sydney University Justice Clinic
- Refugee Advice and Casework Service
- Knowmore Legal Service
- ANTAR
- Central Tablelands and Blue Mountains Community Legal Centre
- The Rainbow Lodge Program
- Humanity Matters
- Tasmanian Aboriginal Legal Service
- Save the Children and 54 reasons
- Australian Centre for Disability Law
- Women’s Justice Network
- Fams
- Australian Services Union
- Inner City Legal Centre
- Just Reinvest NSW
Media contact: Alyssa Robinson 0427 346 017 [email protected]




