learning from the ending gang and youth violence programme mick mcnally, front line team lead, home...
TRANSCRIPT
Learning from the Ending Gang and Youth Violence programme
Mick McNally, Front Line team lead, Home Office
16th September 2014
PRIMARY SCHOOL5-11yrs
EARLY YEARS0-3yrs
PARENT NEGLECT AND EMOTIONAL TRAUMA
PARENTAL SUBSTANCE ABUSE
SECONDARY SCHOOL11-16yrs
POST STATUTORY EDUCATION
16+
UNSTABLE FAMILY SITUATION
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
AT HOME
CONDUCT DISORDER
TRUANCY EXCLUSION
GANG INVOLVEMENT
REPEAT VISITS
TO A&E
LOW ATTAINMENT
EARLY & REPEAT OFFENDING
EARLY VICTIM
JOBLESSNESS
DRUG & ALCOHOL ABUSE
ILLEGAL ECONOMY
POOR MENTAL HEALTH
UNSTABLE HOUSING
Lifecycle of a gang member
November 2011... The Government launched ‘Ending Gang and Youth Violence Report’
• August 2011: Disturbances
• November 2011: Ending Gang and Youth Violence report
• Progress and new commitments set out in two further annual reports
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The Ending Gang and Youth Violence Programme
• Providing support
• Partnership working
• Prevention
• Pathways out
• Punishment and enforcement
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Supporting local areas to tackle gang and youth violence
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Ending Gang and Youth Violence priority areas
Metropolitan Police Force Area:
Barking & Dagenham, Brent, Camden, Croydon, Ealing,
Enfield, Greenwich, Hackney, Hammersmith &
Fulham, Haringey, Islington, Lambeth, Lewisham, Merton, Newham,
Southwark, Tower Hamlets, Waltham Forest,
Wandsworth, Westminster
West Midlands Police Force Area:
Birmingham, Sandwell, Wolverhampton
Merseyside Police Force Area:
Liverpool, Knowsley
West Yorkshire Police Force Area:
Leeds, Bradford
Greater Manchester Police Force Area:
Manchester, Oldham, Salford
South Yorkshire Police Force Area:
Sheffield
Derbyshire Police Force Area: Derby
Nottinghamshire Police Force Area: Nottingham
Feedback from local areas
• “Without a doubt, [the Ending Gang and Youth Violence programme] has been a help to our work locally... Without it we wouldn’t have been able to achieve half the things we have”
• “... It’s really good to have an open discussion about a problem rather than talk about who to blame”
• It’s “everybody’s business”
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Key areas of focus
• In-depth support for local areas
• Improving early intervention
• Prevention and routes out of violent lifestyles
• Violence as a public health issue
• Protection of gang-associated women and girls
• Strengthening the criminal justice response
• Practical improvements in information-sharing
• Understanding the links with organised crime and radicalisation
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Some of the key challenges faced by local areas
• Understanding of the local problem and how to work together to tackle it
• Working with health and mental health partners
• Engaging communities
• Understanding links to local drugs markets and movement of gangs across areas
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Early intervention
• Programme of work with Early Intervention Fund 2014-15
• Bespoke expertise to 20 ‘Pioneering places’ – five Ending Gang and Youth Violence areas
• Reviewing ‘what works’ – best practise in preventing - crime, ASB, violence
• Assessment for practitioners – EIF website
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Raising awareness example – Joint Enterprise training pack and DVD
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Order by phone or email:
0870 241 4680 (Option ‘0’)
Product code:JOINT ENTERPRISE
Youth Violence and Health
• 2012, DoH: Protecting People, Promoting Health - Prof Mark Bellis et al.
• Public Health England – Health and Wellbeing Boards
• A+E Data sharing
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Criminal justice response
• Strengthening knife crime legislation
• Community Impact Statements for gang violence
• Gang members given right support in custody
• Improving gang injunctions
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