Reshaping the approach to offending by young people formed an important strand of New Labour’s domestic policy agenda from 1997-2010. This was based on the idea that an effective response to children and young people in trouble can prevent them going on to a life of crime and therefore contribute not only to a safer society but reduced spending on justice and prisons in the long term.
While the national Youth Justice Board (YJB) and local
Youth Offending Teams (YOT) are still in place to provide a constructive multi-disciplinary
approach to children who offend, services available from
police, local authorities and the NHS has been hard hit. The YJB and YOTs need
to be relaunched and re-energised if they are to effectively meet the
challenges facing an incoming government. The system of closed institutions for
the most serious and persistent young offenders has been in crisis for much of
the period since 2010 and requires urgent and sustained attention.
The Labour Party has announced that reforming services for
young people will be the focus of a major cross-departmental initiative, Young
Futures, if it wins the next election. Key to
that will be an investment in the recruitment, retention and capacity building
of staff working with young people in trouble, making use of the growing
evidence base put together by the Youth
Endowment Foundation. Providing opportunities for mentoring and therapeutic
work must be as central to any
self-styled crackdown as greater enforcement and punishment.
There are six key areas for development
1) Promoting Best Practice in Prevention
and Diversion
The evidence is clear that wherever possible children
should be kept out of the formal justice system as much as possible because of
the negative impact which arrest, court processing and sentences can have. There has been a welcome fall in the numbers
of entrants to the youth justice system but the way that this has been achieved
and the kinds of alternative approaches used in response to youth crime and
anti-social behaviour vary enormously across England and Wales. Identifying, promoting,
and implementing the most effective forms of diversionary and restorative
activity to offer is an important priority. So too is ensuring that
practitioners in the police, youth offending services and other agencies are
properly trained to deliver these activities.
2) Reducing the time from Arrest to Sentence
One of New Labour’s 1997 pledges was to halve the time from
arrest to sentence for persistent young offenders. The target was met by 2001 but
delays have crept back into the youth justice process despite the big fall in
numbers prosecuted. While these reflect well
known problems in the system as a whole, priority should be given to speeding
up cases involving children and young people.
3 Professionalising Youth
Justice
Youth Justice suffers from the paradox that crime committed
by children is of great political and social concern, yet its practitioners
lack professional recognition. This lack of recognition affects their status
and identity with other relevant professionals such as teachers and the wider
public. To fix this, investment is needed in the provision of appropriate
training and skill development and exploration of the scope for professional
accreditation or registration.
4 Promoting Relationship Based Practice with
young people in trouble
Research
on what works in managing children who offend has found an increasing emphasis
on the importance of how practitioners work with young people. Child
First and Trauma Informed Practice have strong adherents, but a more
overarching and comprehensive framework of evidence based practice is needed to
engage the range of professions and agencies working with young people in
trouble in the community, residential care, and secure settings. Relationship
based practice provides such a framework and should be encouraged across the
piece. It involves attitudes – such as
being open, honest, optimistic, and hopeful – and techniques like motivational
interviewing, pro-social modelling and problem solving.
5 Extending the Youth Offending Team approach to
Young Adults
Locally based Youth Offending Teams have proved largely
effective vehicles for applying multi agency work with children who offend. Inspection
reports have been mainly positive in stark contrast to those about probation
services. The YOT approach would have value with older teenagers and young
adults, who often do not reach adult maturity until their mid-twenties.
Piloting the use of youth justice measures with this older cohort should
produce better outcomes than interventions led by a probation service still
struggling to recover from rapid organisational changes and unsustainable demands .
6 Transforming Training of Staff in the
Custodial Estate
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