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Neighbourhoods hold the key

Posted: 08 April 2004 | Subscribe Online


Young people are often blamed for street crime and antisocial behaviour. Terms such as "yob culture" are common parlance. Yet how different life can be for a young person growing up in a neighbourhood that does not see young people as solely to blame.

Imagine living in a place with no facilities, and where you have been barred from the community centre because of the bad behaviour of a minority. Car thefts and robberies take place every day, and illegal drugs are easy to come by.

Council cuts have meant that youth workers rarely visit and most of your friends get stoned because there is nothing else to do. You can't be bothered to go to school as you have received the message that your area is deprived and there is little chance you will ever find any meaningful employment.
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Sadly this is the situation for many young people, and so it is small wonder that they make themselves known. But just how they seek attention often depends on how their community treats them. Adopting a neighbourhood-based approach and treating young people as equals can have a positive effect.

Within the neighbourhood, as a first step, it's a good idea to open a drop-in centre. Provided it is open at the times when young people are most likely to be wandering the streets, such a centre can provide a visible base that young people can identify as their own and treat as a place of safety.

To ensure they feel part of it, the young people should be encouraged to become involved in decorating and managing the centre. Such centres are likely to attract young people, not only because of the range of activities on offer but also because there may not be any alternative youth provision nearby.
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Out-reach youth workers should meet with the young people in these centres and should be able to offer specialist help and advice, such as drugs and alcohol counselling. A full-time worker based in the neighbourhood to co-ordinate voluntary and statutory initiatives can also make a big difference.

If young people are just a part of the problem, then they must also be seen as just one part of the solution. Those with responsibility for local communities must recognise the value of neighbourhood-based strategies, and this must be backed by sustained and long-term funding.

Edwin Lewis is the national development manager for neighbourhood programme Youth Works.


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