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When fear drives policy

Posted: 20 March 2003 | Subscribe Online


By the government's own admission, its latest plans to tackle antisocial behaviour have nothing to do with rising crime rates because, as a matter of fact, those rates have actually fallen by more than a quarter since Labour came to office in 1997.

Instead, they have much more to do with people's perceptions of crime and particularly of the kind of small-scale street crime that occurs in their own communities.

While people's subjective fears cannot be ignored, it is doubtful whether some of the home secretary's proposals in his Respect and Responsibility white paper are a proportionate response.
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Quite apart from the raft of punitive sanctions for beggars, rowdy teenagers, and parents of truants - including housing benefit cuts and fixed penalty notices - there is an expectation that a broader group of professionals, including some working in local education authorities and youth offending teams, will implement them. Traditional tools of the care system, such as family support and fostering, will be pressed into service to tackle anti-social behaviour.

These measures will do much to stigmatise more youngsters as criminals and little in reality to make our communities safer. If we merely imagine that they are safer, we have paid too high a price. 


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