Graphical version
SCOTTISH EXECUTIVE
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Report of Advisory Group on Youth Crime
ANNEX B
THEMATIC ISSUES
1. The following themes draw on responses to the consultation on the work
of the Review and the Advisory Group's own thinking. The material is intended
to be in support of good practice which can inform the plans and strategies
developed at local level.
Early Intervention
2. 'Early intervention' ideally means providing help and support at the
stage before a set of circumstances has turned into a difficulty. In the case
of children and young people who persistently offend, many are found to have
experienced significant deficits of emotional and physical care and educational
attainment at earlier stages in their childhood. Effective measures of early
intervention which seek to prevent or ameliorate such experiences within the
child population as a whole are expected to impact on the later incidence of
offending behaviour.
3. In the life of a child, points for early intervention may include:
- giving potential parents access to information and training to equip them
for parenthood
- provision of antenatal services, including health, material and social needs
- provision of advice points where parents and carers can access and exchange
information on the myriad issues which cause worry and which may need further
support and intervention - "He'll not sleep at night", "She won't eat solids",
"I think I'm going to leave my partner", "The house is damp", "Is it meningitis?",
"I can't cope any more", "We've no money for the electric", "He's biting other
children", "I don't like the people she's playing with", "What time will I
let him stay out till?", "Is it drugs?"
- community based befriending and mentoring programmes for parents and children
to provide positive adult relationships for children, role models for parents
and ordinary social interaction. Building upon the strengths of the local
community and using the skills within it will promote its own well-being.
Creating opportunities for families to use their own strengths - for instance,
supporting grandparents to support their grandchildren - promotes the ability
of the members of the family to support each other and the child
- increased access to and information about help lines for children and young
people like Childline, Who Cares? and the Scottish Child Law Centre, and drop-in
Centres/Outreach projects where information, advice and companionship can
be offered on the child's or young person's own terms. Information technology
used in inventive ways can help children and young people access information
and keep in touch with key workers as well as helping them to develop essential
skills for the future
- increased access to, information about and involvement by young people in
the development of youth and leisure resources which are local, affordable
and interesting
- increased educational opportunities for a range of needs and abilities in
schools, ensuring that all young people have positive full-time educational
experiences, preferably in main stream schools; if a child is excluded from
mainstream education, it may be appropriate to consider whether proportionate
funding should accompany the child from the education budget to finance alternative
education during the period of exclusion
- increased consultation with children, young people, families and communities
about needs, resources and opportunities.
Risk factors
4. Several risk factors have been shown to have a high correlation with
later offending behaviour; the greater the number of risk factors present, the
greater the probability of offending: (Asquith et al, Children, Young People
and Offending, Farrington Understanding and Preventing Youth Crime).
- pre- and perinatal factors: teenage child bearing, absent fathers,
substance abuse during pregnancy which leads to low birth weight, perinatal
complications
- parenting: poor supervision and child-management techniques; erratic
or harsh discipline; parental conflict; cruel, passive or neglectful attitude;
anti-social or criminal parents
- hyperactivity and impulsivity: these conditions may cause lower attainment
at school, poorer ability to foresee consequences of action, difficulty with
abstract thinking
- home environment: separation of parents through conflict, separation
from parents, offending by siblings
- poverty/socio-economic deprivation: poor health, low educational
attainment, behavioural problems and delinquency, low family income and poor
housing
- low intelligence: poor ability to manipulate abstract concepts, foresee
consequences or appreciate feelings of victims
- low school attainment: with resultant disaffection and/or exclusion
from school
- association with delinquent peers
- school, community and situational influences
We do not know, however, how many children exposed to these factors do not
offend later or do not experience difficulties in their transition to adulthood.
Effective Intervention
5. Identification of the children who are most vulnerable to the interplay
of these factors should be undertaken by Health services, by local authorities
and partner agencies with a view to promoting and safeguarding their welfare
in terms of Section 22 of the Children (Scotland) Act 1995.
6. Support should be given at the point of identification of need, not when
the difficulties have become more entrenched. Targeted home and child care support
may be necessary and carers may benefit from specific behavioural programmes
to increase their capabilities. Community support may be needed in order to
increase opportunities for social inclusion and peer support. Creative educational
support should be provided in order to obviate the risk of diminished attainment,
disaffection and exclusion. Assessment of health and the individual's stage
of development must help inform the delivery of services.
7. Participation of parents and other members of the family should be integral
to the planning process. Separated carers need to be involved where appropriate.
Carers and siblings involved in offending should have access to programmes to
help them to help the child.
8. Children exposed to the factors listed above are among the most vulnerable
in our community. Targeted intervention will not only have an effect in reducing
the probability of later offending, it will help to keep this group of children
safer.
9. Delivery of support and services should be on a partnership basis with
children and families to the greatest extent possible. Where children and/or
carers are unwilling or unable to co-operate with measures designed to help
the child and it is believed that compulsory measures of supervision may be
necessary in order to achieve beneficial change, practitioners should consider
whether or not to refer the child's case to the Children's Reporter in terms
of Section 53 of the Children (Scotland) Act 1995. Where the child is already
subject to compulsory measures of supervision, consideration should be given
to the need to review the requirement.
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