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Posted: 28 November 2002 | Subscribe Online


Our regular panel comments on a topic in the news:

The Home Office may talk of reducing the number of young people in custody, but a quick survey of the juvenile secure estate suggests a single prevailing principle: pack 'em in. Lord Warner, chairperson of the Youth Justice Board, told a recent conference that young offenders institutions and other detention facilities for young people were running at 97 per cent capacity, well beyond the 93 per cent at which the system starts to creak. Just as worryingly, he revealed that 20 young people a week identified as vulnerable were being placed in prison service custody, even though the board aims to place such youngsters in other, less forbidding, secure accommodation. Lord Warner called on the courts to resort less often to jail sentences and use the growing number of community penalties available to them. Home secretary David Blunkett had a more novel suggestion: young offenders should be given boxing lessons to turn them away from crime. Boxing could provide an avenue for excluded young people to re-engage with the wider community, he said. Phil Frampton, national chairperson, Care Leavers Association
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"No one should be surprised that the prisons are overcrowded. The government has abandoned serious attempts at improving the lot of young people and has instead gone in for "lock'em up" thinking. Home secretary David Blunkett's ridiculous solution is to get young prisoners to learn to box - like who? Like Mike Tyson, perhaps, or some other living example of how not to behave."

Bill Badham, development officer, National Youth Agency

"We lock up more young people than any other country in western Europe. If you're black, it's six times more likely you'll be locked up than if you're white. There have been 11 suicides in five years. Conditions have been described as 'unacceptable in a civilised society' and 'institutionalised child abuse'. Raise the age of criminal responsibility. Stop trying children in courts as if they were adults. Only use prison as a last resort and for the shortest possible time. We have to ensure young prisoners' rights to health, education, protection, advocacy and complaint are protected."

Karen Squillino, senior practitioner, Barnardo's

"The government certainly has not got the solution to reducing the ridiculous number of young people in custody. With the implementation of detention training orders technically a child can be locked up for an offence from the age of 10. The emergence of referral orders is not going to ease the problem. If magistrates are not keen to offer a first-time offender a referral order, their only other option is custody. This will serve only to increase the number of incarcerated young people. If there is going to be any reduction in locked-up young people the punitive ideology needs to shift to a more holistic way of thinking."
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Martin Green, chief executive, Counsel and Care for the Elderly

"The problems with the youth justice system are a symptom of the mixed messages that are increasingly coming out of the government. On the one hand we have ministers talking about the need to re-engage socially excluded young people in positive ways and, on the other, we have sometimes the same minister talking about punishment in a much harsher sense. The home secretary's sound bite about boxing clubs would have been more logical if accompanied by extra funding for youth boxing clubs. We need politicians who understand that a sound bite is not a solution."



Felicity Collier, chief executive, Baaf Adoption and Fostering

"The crisis is of our own making - where is evidence-based practice? Early intervention through the courts with young offenders escalates their progress to custody - this is demonstrated by the more punitive recommendations now apparent in pre-sentence reports. Custodial remands are highly correlated with custodial sentences and then with the poorest outcomes."


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