Transcript Desistance

Supporting Desistance in Youth
Justice
NAYJ
TRANSFORMING YOUTH JUSTICE SEMINAR
2 4 TH J U N E 2 0 1 4
DR SAM KING
DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINOLOGY
UNIVERSITY OF LEICESTER
[email protected]
What is desistance?
Primary
Age/maturity
Situated agency
• Behaviour
• Formal compliance
• Short-term
Social bonds
Secondary
• Identity
• Substantive
compliance
• Long-term
Tertiary
• Belonging
• Substantive
compliance
• Long-term
Narrative/identity
Based on Robinson and McNeill, 2008; McNeill, 2014
Key definitional features of desistance
 Process, not an event, lapse and relapse are
common
 It is ‘naturally occurring’, but assisted
desistance is possible
 Different forms of desistance (primary, secondary,
tertiary)
 Interactive effects of individual (human capital,
agency), society (social bonds, social capital),
community (identity, belonging) and CJS (delabelling)
Why desistance matters for young people
Dynamics
of change
• Avoid labels, categories, classifications
• Personal/individual change
• Lapse/relapse
Assisted
desistance
• Practices for long-term reductions in reoffending
• Support when people are ready to change
• Encouragement when people are not yet ready
Holistic
• What outcomes matter
• Processes
• Joined up
Based on Healy, 2010; King, 2013a
Why desistance matters for young people
11-15 yrs
3,668,302
General population
Commencing community sentence
16-20 yrs
4,005,542
21-24 yrs
3,483,414
Probation caseload
Of those sentenced to custody
9,691,459
Are, or about to be, fathers
Sources: T2A, 2012; ONS, 2013
Key messages about why desistance matters for young people
 Youth, adolescence, young adulthood, adulthood
 What do these labels actually mean?
 The way we respond to people now impacts on
processes of desistance
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Little wonder lapse and relapse occur?
 It is possible to support desistance
 Aged out or assisted out?
The process of desistance
Relapse
Obstacles (breakdown
of bonds, temptation,
necessity)
Offending
Maintenance
Human and
social capital
developed
Desistance
Enhanced social
bonding, change
in routines,
change in peers
Open to
change
Triggers – e.g.
longer sentence,
harm caused,
external influence
etc.
Perceives
lifestyle and
situational
context
differently
Opportunities
to change –
taking action
Adapted from Shapland and Bottoms, 2011
The evidence base
 People choose to desist, but certain practices (e.g.
arts, learning, relationships, routines) can initiate
the choice (needs to be opportunities)
 Opportunities come in many forms (education,
employment, housing, relationships)
 For some this occurs naturally (ageing), for others
requires the right balance of maturity and social
bonds
 Recognition of social bonds changes as individuals
mature
Maturity
 Maturity is a core, developmental concept which
addresses the processes through which a young person
achieves the status of adulthood. These developmental
processes include the interactions between physical,
intellectual, neurological, emotional and social development.
Although physical and intellectual development is usually
completed during adolescence, for some people emotional
and social maturation can continue into the early to
mid-twenties. Young adults often differ from each other
because of their variable maturity and these differences often
show themselves in the ways in which individuals manage the
multiple transitions which are associated with the
journey to adulthood (University of Birmingham, BCT and
T2A, 2013: 2, emphasis added).
Maturity
 Responsibility
 Independence, self-reliance, personal identity
 Temperance
 Evaluate consequences, limit impulsivity, control aggressive
responses
 Perspective
 Consider views of others, understand wider context within
which decisions are made
Source Prior et al, 2011
Maturity and desistance
Challenge of making personal transitions
Transition through childhood,
adolescence and into adulthood
Transition towards and subsequent
maintenance of desistance
Challenge of making transition from youth to adult services
4% young people report good
transition from CAMHS to AMHS
Loss of support and inconsistency in
taking account of maturity
Challenge of developing social bonds
Education, training, employment
Community, sense of belonging
Sources: Howard League, 2005; Revolving Doors Agency, 2013; Young Minds, 2013
Key messages about maturity and desistance
 Desistance depends upon particular interaction of
individual and social factors
 Can be initiated by life events or prompting by
another individual
 Involves development of strong personal identity
and understanding of social context through
human agency and maturity
 But, requires social context with opportunities,
sense of belonging and a process of certification
Impeding or assisting desistance
 Deprivation of liberty
 Enhancing liberty
 Deprivation of
 Encouraging
relationships
 Causing harm or
reducing opportunities
 Deprivation of identity
 Limiting reflexive
thinking
relationships
 Providing opportunities
or ‘goods’
 Enhancing identity
 Allowing room for and
encouraging reflexive
thinking
What should youth justice look like?
 Community centres offering ‘one-stop shops’ are
known to work well with women and young people
who have offended
 Is there scope for developing workshops to
encourage human agency and maturity?
 Are there alternative ways of assessing human
agency and maturity?
 Is it possible to provide alternative ways of working
with young people who are not ready to desist?
References
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Healy, D. (2010) The Dynamics of Desistance: Charting Pathways Through Change. Cullompton: Willan.
The Howard League (2005) Young, neglected and back: young men in prison. Research briefing 2. London: The Howard League.
King, S. (2013a) ‘Assisted Desistance: Experiences of Probation’ Probation Journal, 60(2): 136-151.
King, S. (2013b) Desistance Transitions and the Impact of Probation. Abingdon: Routledge.
McNeill, F. (2014) Three aspects of desistance, blog-post based on a short paper prepared for a University of Sheffield Centre for
Criminological Research Knowledge Exchange Seminar at the British Academy in London on 15th May 2014, online at
http://blogs.iriss.org.uk/discoveringdesistance/2014/05/23/three-aspects-of-desistance/
ONS (2013) Population Estimates by Age and Sex, online at
http://ons.gov.uk/ons/taxonomy/search/index.html?nscl=Population+Estimates+by+Age+and+Sex&nsclorig=Population+Estimates+by+Age+and+Sex&content-type=Summary&contenttype=Video&sortDirection=DESCENDING&sortBy=pubdate
Prior, D., Farrow, K., Hughes, N., Kelly, G., Manders, G., White, S. and Wilkinson, B. (2011) Maturity, young adults and criminal
justice: a literature review. University of Birmingham: IASS.
Revolving Doors Agency (2013) First Generation: One Year On, online at http://www.t2a.org.uk/publications/#all
Robinson, G. and McNeill, F. (2008) ‘Exploring the dynamics of compliance with community penalties’ Theoretical Criminology,
12(4): 431-449.
Shapland, J. and Bottoms, A. (2011) Reflections on social values, offending and desistance among young adult recidivists,
Punishment and Society, 13(3): 256-291.
T2A (2012) Pathways from Crime, online at http://www.t2a.org.uk/publications/#all
University of Birmingham, BCT and T2A (2013) Taking Account of Maturity: A Guide for Probation Practitioners, online at
http://www.t2a.org.uk/publications/#all
Young Minds (2013) Same Old… the experiences of young offenders with mental health needs, online at
http://www.t2a.org.uk/publications/#all