Sixty Second Interview with Enver Solomon
New figures revealed the government has failed to meet a public service agreement target to reduce re-offending by juveniles by 5 per cent this week. The Home Office report showed that there had only been a 3.8 per cent drop in re-offending by 10-17 year-olds from 1997-2004. Amy Taylor talks to Enver Solomon, deputy director of the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies at King’s College London, about the missed target.
What do you think could be behind the government missing the target?
I am not surprised that the target has been missed. In reality the multiple factors that lead children to re-offend, housing problems, mental health issues, substance misuse, a lack of education and training, family breakdown etc cannot be tackled by the criminal justice agencies. Solutions lie outside the confines of criminal justice in, for example, improved mental health care. Until and unless there is a more multi-agency holistic approach to addressing the causes of re-offending there will not be significant reductions in re-offending rates. What's more, re-offending figures should be treated with some scepticism anyway, as most crime is not detected and does not lead to a conviction. The 'real' picture of re-offending is probably very different.
Some campaigners have said that more young people are going into the criminal justice system for behaviour which would previously not have been responded to as criminal due to the introduction of new police targets on arrest and convictions. What do you think about this argument?
I think that is broadly the case and, rightly so, the Youth Justice Board is aware of this and concerned. It reflects, what in my view is a creeping criminalisation whereby the reaches of the criminal justice state extend ever further into activities and behaviour that historically has not been the business of criminal justice.
A lack of face-to-face contact time with youth offending team staff because of too much paper work has also been blamed. Is this an issue you have encountered?
I have not encountered this specifically, however, I think that when you have more children and young people being processed through the youth justice system it is inevitable that Yot workers will have higher caseloads and so be under greater pressure. Consequently they are likely to have less time to engage with children and develop effective relationships. I am not saying that this does not happen, but I do think hard pressed staff struggle to find the time to do the work they would have done if caseloads were lower and more manageable.
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