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Curfew Unblocked: Rethinking Juvenile Restrictions Through Libertarian Paternalism and Community Trust

Traditional juvenile curfews have long been employed as a tool to reduce nighttime crime and victimization. However, emerging data and sociological critiques suggest that blanket restrictions often lead to unintended consequences: criminalizing normative behavior, straining police-community relations, and failing to address root causes of delinquency. This paper explores the concept of a “curfew unblocked”—a policy shift away from punitive time-based restrictions toward rehabilitative, trust-based interventions. Drawing on evidence from cities that have repealed or reformed curfew ordinances, we argue that unblocking curfews (i.e., removing blanket bans) in favor of targeted, resource-driven strategies can reduce arrests of at-risk youth without increasing crime rates. curfew unblocked

Empirical studies from the past two decades present a mixed picture. A 2016 meta-analysis in the Journal of Criminal Justice found that curfews produced, at best, a modest short-term reduction in daytime crimes but no significant effect on nighttime juvenile victimization. Moreover, enforcement often falls disproportionately on minority youth, leading to “status offense” citations that clog juvenile courts. In San Diego, a five-year study following curfew repeal showed no statistically significant rise in juvenile crime, yet a 40% drop in curfew-related arrests, freeing police for higher-priority calls. Drawing on evidence from cities that have repealed

[Author], “Curfew Unblocked: Rethinking Juvenile Restrictions,” Journal of Progressive Criminology , forthcoming. freeing police for higher-priority calls. [Author]