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Youth pay the price for adult failings

Posted: 05 December 2002 | Subscribe Online


It is breathtaking that we should even need Mr Justice Munby's judgment that the Children Act 1989 applies to children in prison service establishments. It is a disgrace that a government which constantly mouths, "modernisation" with all the fervour of a Hare Krishna convert, has so far shown no inclination to tackle the mess that passes for the management of the young in our penal institutions.

Writing in The Observer, David Ramsbotham, the former chief inspector of prisons, states what should be the obvious: prison is no place for children. If government insists, then the prison service has to adapt its core business to cope adequately.
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So far, with honourable and stunning exceptions, it has failed miserably. Ramsbotham is pessimistic about the likelihood of radical improvement. At present, for instance, an operational manager is responsible for policy in establishments that contain children but not for institutions where there is a mix of children and young offenders.

Ramsbotham argues that governors of young offenders institutions should act in loco parentis, responsible for the application of the Children Act. Each institution should have a social service manager who consults every young person's social worker about risk assessment, needs and sentence planning and to organise continuity of support on release, as with detention and training orders.

A report published by the Prison Reform Trust in the summer said that the five prisons with the highest levels of recorded assaults were all young offender or juvenile institutions.

Lord Warner, chairperson of the Youth Justice Board, dismissed the figures as "inaccurate", claiming that "assault" is defined too loosely - for instance, to include pushing. He wants assault to be recorded, on the Scottish model, only if it is "worse than a black eye".
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What kind of madness is this? Shoving, even verbal abuse where no punch is thrown, all indicate a climate of violence and intimidation which contributes to the appalling suicide rate and inhibits the opportunity for real change in a young person's life.

What will make a difference? Probably, high-profile cases using the Human Rights Act 1998, forcing reluctant and therefore unsustainable change, at a far greater human and financial cost than necessary.

David Blunkett's lock'em up and leave'em fever is a manifestation of a deeper malaise: a fear and hatred of any child whose behaviour reflects the failings of the adult community.

Nothing modern in that view, just re-read Dickens.


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