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Social workers 'fail' to protect inmates

Posted: 17 April 2003 | Subscribe Online


Social workers have been criticised for "washing their hands" of responsibility for children in young offenders institutions.

Speaking at a conference organised by penal reform charity the Howard League, Rachel Hodgkin of the Children's Rights Alliance said social workers were failing to fulfil their child protection duties.

Despite a High Court ruling last November that the Children Act 1989 applies to children in YOIs, they were still not receiving the same level of protection as others, Hodgkin said.
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Chief inspector of prisons Anne Owers, who also spoke at the conference, added that she was worried about those in YOIs because area child protection committees "do not want to know" about them.

"The prison service and the local social services department have a split responsibility but my great fear is that the children will fall through that gap between the two and everyone will point the finger at someone else," Owers said.
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But social workers said they were unable to influence how children were treated within the prison system, partly because there were unclear procedures for making complaints about punishments meted out by prison officers.

Another speaker, barrister Ian Wise, said he believed the Howard League's victory would "open the door to a whole raft of legal challenges, which will shed light on this murky area".


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