The chief inspector of prisons warned this week of the dangers facing 18- to 21-year-old male prisoners if the option to send them to young offender institutions is removed.
Anne Owers said proposals in the Offender Management Bill, under which offenders could be transferred to adult prisons at 18, must not be used to automatically place this group of offenders in adult jails.
In a report on young male prisoners, Owers insisted that adult prisons did not provide sufficient standards of safety and decency for this group of offenders.
While the report found that the group did best in specific young adult YOIs, Owers said dedicated and separate units in adult jails were the next best option and would allow more prisons in the country to accommodate young adults.
She told Community Care that in YOIs where juveniles were also accommodated, "resources get pulled away from young adults to the juveniles because of [the establishment's] contract requirements with the Youth Justice Board".
However, she added that some YOIs had "tried very hard and managed to overcome that".
YJB finds foster care pilots for young offenders prove effective
02 December 2008
Ed Balls: youth justice teams must work closer with schools
28 November 2008
Reforming Scotland's hearing system
24 November 2008
Jacqui Knight, social worker of the year
18 November 2008
World class commissioning learning resource
28 November 2008
Baby P case in Haringey
18 November 2008
Adult star ratings: Councils improve for sixth year running
Sharon Shoesmith removed after 'devastating' inspection report
Details of government consultations
28 November 2008
Private Member Bills
21 November 2008
Government Legislation
21 November 2008