Why spit hoods don’t create safety in youth detention

Jul 2025

The Northern Territory Government’s decision to reintroduce spit hoods in youth detention is a step backwards. These devices don’t create safety—they escalate harm, undermine trust, and make it harder for both young people and youth justice officers to feel safe.

At Australian Childhood Foundation, we work alongside children and young people who have experienced significant trauma, loss and disconnection. Many of the young people who come into contact with the justice system are already carrying the impacts of complex harm. What they need is stability, support and the chance to heal.

As our CEO Janise Mitchell says:

“Children who come into contact with the justice system have often experienced significant trauma, loss and disconnection. Responding with punishment only compounds that harm. What these children need is safety, stability and the chance to heal. When we invest in relationships and restorative approaches, we not only support their recovery—we create safer communities for everyone.”

Spit hoods don’t create safety—they increase harm

We understand that youth justice officers also need to feel safe at work. No one should be spat on or placed at risk. But spit hoods don’t create safety for staff or for young people. They increase tension, escalate incidents, and further entrench adversarial dynamics between young people and staff.

As Blythe McAuley, our Regional Director for Therapeutic Services in the NT and Victoria, explains:

“We could focus on the right of everyone in the youth detention space to feel safe and supported—including the young people and the officers. But spit hoods do not create that safety. They increase tension, escalate harm, and make it harder to build trust and connection.”

The Northern Territory Ombudsman has previously reported that spit hoods can heighten stress and conflict, contributing to more—not less—risk in youth detention centres.

What’s needed is not more restraints. It’s more investment in the people working directly with young people.

“Officers should have reflective practice, group consultation, and a voice in planning for young people,” Blythe says. “We deliver training that builds skills in trauma-informed practice—but without the time and support to embed it, that learning can’t translate into everyday safety.”

What actually works to create safety?

There are proven approaches that support safety for everyone in youth justice settings. These include:

  • Therapeutic care models that address trauma and de-escalate crises
  • Restorative justice that promotes accountability and healing—not just control
  • Reflective supervision and peer consultation for youth justice officers
  • Culturally led responses designed by Aboriginal communities
  • Whole-system investment in diversion, education, and family support

These approaches support long-term change. They reduce reoffending. And most importantly—they treat young people and staff with the dignity and respect they deserve.

We need to choose a better path

We’ve been here before. In 2016, images of children hooded and strapped to mechanical chairs at Don Dale shocked the nation. A Royal Commission followed, along with promises that those harmful practices would never return.

Reintroducing spit hoods is not only a breach of that promise—it’s a rejection of everything the evidence tells us. Spit hoods don’t create safety. They create more harm, more fear, and more disconnection.

As Noel Macnamara, Director of the Centre for Excellence in Therapeutic Care, reflects:

“How we treat our most vulnerable children—especially in their moments of greatest distress—reveals the very essence of our humanity and the values we hold as a society. It is in these difficult moments, when children are at their worst, that our true character is tested. Do we respond with empathy, compassion and care, or with fear, control and punishment? The choices we make define not only the lives of these children, but also the kind of society we become. Right now, by turning to harmful practices like spit hoods, we risk losing sight of our shared humanity and becoming something unrecognisable—detached from the principles of dignity, justice and hope that should guide us. This is a pivotal moment to choose a path that upholds healing and respect, rather than one that perpetuates harm and division.”

We urge the Northern Territory Government to reconsider. Instead of punitive quick fixes, we need sustained, evidence-based investment in people, relationships, and trauma-informed care.

We know what works. Let’s build a youth justice system that reflects it.

For more on this and our shared vision for community-led, restorative youth justice reform, please read the joint media statement from the Northern Territory Council of Social Services here: https://ntcoss.org.au/media-releases/joint-media-statement-safety-not-soundbites-community-led-solutions-key-to-youth-justice-reform/

 

You may be interested in: Youth justice

Care criminalisation: issues and current research - Research brief
Care criminalisation: issues and current research - Research brief
Young people who are in, or have been in out-of-home care, particularly those with experience of living in residential care, are vulnerable to a number of negative outcomes, including having...
Read more
They came to us for care and left with a criminal record
They came to us for care and left with a criminal record
There is a nexus between living in Out of Home Care (OOHC) and being involved with the criminal justice system. In NSW children and young people in OOHC have been...
Read more
Leaving Care: What we know and don’t know about outcomes for young people
Leaving Care: What we know and don’t know about outcomes for young people
The research is clear: young people do not fare well when they leave care. Study after study, both in Australia and internationally, tells us that our care leavers are more...
Read more
Minimum age of criminal responsibility in the ACT
Minimum age of criminal responsibility in the ACT
  This submission addresses the question of whether the age of criminal responsibility (MACR) should be increased and submits that the age should be raised from 10 years old to...
Read more
Let’s Talk About the Summer Holiday – a poem about detention
Let’s Talk About the Summer Holiday – a poem about detention
"Let’s talk about the summer holiday, even though I’m in detention in was still fun aye. Because it was so hot, there was no time to use the indoor gym...
Read more
Minimum Age of Criminal Responsibility - alternative diversion model
Minimum Age of Criminal Responsibility - alternative diversion model
The focus of this submission The Australian Childhood Foundation and Centre for Excellence in Therapeutic Care (CETC) are dedicated to upholding the rights of children and helping them to heal...
Read more
When systems designed to protect do harm
When systems designed to protect do harm
What comes to mind when you think about the child protection or youth justice system?  Protection and safeguarding? Rehabilitation? Trauma-informed care? These two complex and often interacting systems are intended...
Read more
Women in Leadership: Fiona Atkins at Ashley Youth Detention Centre
Women in Leadership: Fiona Atkins at Ashley Youth Detention Centre
The care of young people in detention has been a focus in the media both in Australia and overseas. Media reports have highlighted inadequate levels of care and abuse of...
Read more
Student spotlight: John Gallagher on Youth Justice
Student spotlight: John Gallagher on Youth Justice
Over the past year, the Centre for Excellence in Therapeutic Care has launched its first blended learning program, CHC40521 - Certificate IV in Youth Justice.Dan Howell, Senior Manager for Training,...
Read more
Tough talk, weak evidence: Victoria’s step backward on the minimum age
Tough talk, weak evidence: Victoria’s step backward on the minimum age
The Centre for Excellence in Therapeutic Care (CETC) is confounded, disappointed and seriously concerned about the Victorian Government’s backflip on raising the Minimum Age of Criminal Responsibility (MACR) in Victoria....
Read more
Trauma-informed... youth detention? The realities of reform
Trauma-informed... youth detention? The realities of reform
Last week, CETC facilitated an insightful panel about trauma-informed care and young people in youth detention. CETC welcomed Joanne O’Connor, Associate Professor Tim Moore and Murray Robinson to share their...
Read more
The overlooked crisis of FASD hiding in youth justice and out-of-home care
The overlooked crisis of FASD hiding in youth justice and out-of-home care
In Australia, children and young people with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) in out-of-home care are at critically greater risk of getting involved with the youth justice system. The issues...
Read more
Senate inquiry into Australia’s youth justice and incarceration system
Senate inquiry into Australia’s youth justice and incarceration system
The Centre for Excellence in Therapeutic Care (CETC) has submitted its response to the Senate Inquiry into Australia’s Youth Justice and Incarceration System. This submission highlights the urgent need for...
Read more
National, unified approach needed to reform youth justice
National, unified approach needed to reform youth justice
The past year has seen alarming regressions across Australia in youth justice policy, with some governments moving towards more punitive measures and stepping back from evidence-based reforms like raising the...
Read more
Help Way Earlier! The 24 recommendations from the Australian Children's Commissioner
Help Way Earlier! The 24 recommendations from the Australian Children's Commissioner
In August 2024, the Australian Children’s Commissioner released the report ‘Help Way Earlier!' How Australia can transform child justice to improve the safety and wellbeing of children. The report investigates...
Read more
What are young people in detention really asking for?
What are young people in detention really asking for?
Young people’s participation in decisions and that affect them is a right, not a privilege. Yet for young people in out-of-home care and detention, this right is often seen as...
Read more
Let’s be the generation that ends youth incarceration—and builds a justice system that truly puts children first
Let’s be the generation that ends youth incarceration—and builds a justice system that truly puts children first
In Australia today, the practice of incarcerating children—some as young as 10—continues to cast a long shadow over our justice system. Youth detention in Australia, particularly as it affects Aboriginal...
Read more