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Commissioner queries use of tagging

Posted: 20 May 2004 | Subscribe Online


Electronic tagging of young people may be justified in only a few cases, Scotland's new children's commissioner has warned.

Responding to Edinburgh's pilot scheme for the electronic tagging of young offenders, which is to start soon, Kathleen Marshall said there was a danger that using tagging to deal with antisocial behaviour could lead to the overuse of control at the expense of providing care.

She added that recent media attention about the children of drug abusing parents in Scotland reflected a "deep and chronic failure in Scotland to provide support to families before the situation reaches crisis point".
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She said: "Practitioners tell me they are not in a position to provide support, and reports tell us that children who offend are also the children most in need of care and attention."

Marshall also said it would be a "shame" if reports were correct about the Scottish executive already deciding to split youth justice from welfare in the children's hearing system after the current review.

She acknowledged, however, that it was important for defenders of the welfare basis of the hearing system to be brave enough to debate its future.
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Baroness Stern, of the International Centre for Prison Studies, told the conference that the hearing system allowed choices taken in Scotland to be made in the best interest of the child.

She said Scotland's juvenile justice system was "for all its problems, much admired around the world". By contrast, the joint parliamentary committee on human rights had protested about the treatment of juveniles in England, adding that the convention seemed to be "imperfectly understood by the Westminster government".


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