Chapter 4 Targeted Interventions to Reduce Youth Violence
4.1
There are many, often interdependent factors which combine to influence
behaviour during childhood, adolescence and through into adulthood. Chapter 4
examines a diverse range of interventions that aim to reduce youth violence by
decreasing risk factors and increasing protective factors which occur at
individual, family and community levels.
4.2
Chapter 4 also includes consideration of strategies to reduce alcohol
related violence and to improve safety through the implementation of best
practice policing. While the emphasis in this Chapter is prevention and early
intervention, consideration is given to interventions that aim to support the
rehabilitation of young victims of violence and to reduce recidivism among
young offenders.
4.3
Strategies to address societal level issues associated with social and
economic disadvantage, and cultural influences which reinforce social norms and
shape attitudes towards young people and violence will be considered in Chapter
5.
Approaches to Intervention
Risk and protective factors have been
broadly categorised according to whether they occur at individual, relational, community
or societal level. There are a large number of strategies and interventions that
aim to reduce youth violence and its impacts on young people by targeting risk
and protective factors occurring at each of these levels.[1]
Regardless of which
level or levels are targeted, essentially
strategies to address youth violence focus on reducing exposure to risk factors
and building resilience by increasing exposure to protective factors.[2]
4.4
In addition, strategies and interventions to reduce youth violence can also
be classified as primary, secondary or tertiary. As described by the Australian
Institute of Family Studies (AIFS):
Primary prevention is targeted at the general community,
aiming to promote healthy relationships. Secondary prevention targets at-risk
groups and individuals such as young people who have experienced violence in
the family home. Tertiary prevention involves those who have already
experienced violence, including counselling programs, statutory interventions
and perpetrator groups.[3]
4.5
While most evidence to the inquiry has emphasised early intervention and
prevention (that is primary and secondary interventions), the need to also
provide tertiary interventions to assist and rehabilitate young victims of
violence, as well as to reduce levels of recidivism among young offenders is
also acknowledged.
Individual
4.6
Individual approaches to addressing youth violence are generally aimed at
reducing levels of aggressive and anti-social behaviour by assisting with the
development of life skills.
Social Development Education
4.7
The value of social development programs as an intervention to reduce
individual risk factors that contribute to violence and increase protective
factors was raised frequently in evidence.[4] As described in the
submission from the Queensland Commission for Children and Young People and
Child Guardian, social development programs:
... commonly include improving competency and social skills with
peers and generally promoting behaviour that is positive, friendly and
cooperative. Such programs can be provided universally or to high-risk groups
and are most frequently carried out in school or alternative education
settings. Programs that emphasise social skills appear to be among the most
effective among youth violence prevention strategies. They also appear to be
more effective when delivered to children in preschool and primary school
environments rather than to secondary school students.[5]
4.8
Also emphasising the importance of early intervention, the submission
from The Smith Family describes the value of pre-school enrichment programs and
social development programs:
Preschool enrichment programs These aim to increase
children's school readiness by providing them with early academic skills such
as emergent literacy and numeracy, and emotional literacy, such as raising self
esteem, problem solving, and empathy.
Social development programs These aim to promote
pro-social behaviour and prevent aggression in children by developing life
skills such as anger management, empathy, developing and maintaining healthy
relationships, problem-solving and conflict resolution.
The positive long-term effects of these programs are most
pronounced in children from disadvantaged backgrounds and at-risk groups,
reducing involvement in violence and improving educational and employment
outcomes.[6]
4.9
There was general consensus that social development interventions in early
childhood have the greatest effect. However, the need for interventions to be appropriate
to the developmental capacity of the child and to be provided continuously as
the child transitions through key developmental stages was also noted.[7]
4.10
Reference was made in evidence to a number of social development programs.
These programs aim to assist children and young people with moral development, anger
management and conflict resolution, and to promote pro-social behaviours e.g. Promoting
Alternative Thinking Strategies (PATHS), Second Steps, Rock and
Water, Teach One to Lead One.[8] Reference was also made
to social development programs which more specifically aim to promote development
of respectful, healthy relationships and tolerance of diversity e.g. LoveBites,
Respectful Relationships.[9]
4.11
A number of inquiry participants recommended that social development
education interventions include clear and unambiguous information about the consequences
of violent behaviour. This information should give young people a clear
understanding of the potential impact of violence on victims and the
consequences for perpetrators, including criminality. In this regard, the
submission from Voices Against Violence observed:
Schools need to reinforce and educate those values - but also
to practice what they preach. Schools need to be able to effectively punish bad
behaviour. We need a society and culture with respect for authority where those
in authority can hand out a realistic consequence. Many schools currently run
values based programs, however these programs need to be constructive and real
and avoid pushing a ‘warm and fuzzy – lets all be nice to each other’ message.
Such programs must teach consequences. They must outline there is a punishment
consequence for inappropriate behaviour, and they must teach that there is an
impact consequence for the receiver. Put simply children need to be taught the
impact of hurting someone else.[10]
4.12
Evidence to the inquiry also included information on social development
resources which have already incorporated components designed to educate young
people about the consequences of their actions and of poor decision making.
Examples include the Skool Project[11] and Putting
Youth in the Picture.[12]
4.13
Recognising bullying as a widespread form of violence that occurs in
various social settings, submissions have also identified the need for social
development programs that specifically target bullying behaviour. Importantly,
to be effective, evidence suggests that anti-bullying strategies need to assist
both the victims and perpetrators of bullying.[13] Again, evidence to the
inquiry included reference to a number of anti-bullying social development
interventions including Solving the Jigsaw, Pride and Prejudice, Friendly
Schools and Families.[14]
4.14
In the context of changing communications technologies, a number of
submissions considered options addressing the increase in cyber-bullying
specifically. Professor Kerry Carrington of Queensland University of Technology
(QUT) noted some of the difficulties of addressing cyber-bullying through
increased regulation of the internet and other electronic forms of
communication as follows:
The difficulty of regulating internet crimes poses manifold
challenges to policy makers and legislators. Regulation is costly, fraught with
disputes about jurisdictional liability and frequently outside the reach of
regulators. Electronic bullies can also use anonymity, false identities or
temporary email accounts to avoid detection.[15]
4.15
Instead Professor Carrington suggested that the best approach to
tackling cyber-bullying is through education about the safe and ethical use of
internet and other electronic forms of communication, saying:
... the best way to minimise harm is to prevent these crimes
from occurring in the first place. Responsibility for preventing cyberbullying
rests with young people, parents, educators, regulators and internet service
providers. Young people need to be educated about the ethical use of internet
and electronic forms of communication and warned of the risks of cyberbullying ...
Parents and young people can take control of cyberspace by target hardening
their home computers with internet security tools, software to block fight
sites, and regulating the unsupervised time slots allocated for accessing the
internet.[16]
4.16
Youthlaw & Frontyard Youth Services also recommended that cyber-bullying
strategies be directed to young people, parents and educators, suggesting:
n raising the awareness
of young people about personal decision-making in on-line social spaces,
n educating parents and
encouraging setting of appropriate controls for their children’s engagement
with digital-technology, and
n supporting teachers
to assist in identifying students at risk of bullying or being bullies
themselves.[17]
Early Education Facilities and Schools as the Hub of Social Development
4.17
While acknowledging the importance of families, particularly parents, in
providing guidance and discipline to support the development of values, pro-social
behaviours and life skills, it was recognised that this is not available to all
children and young people in the home. As explained by Dr Adam Tomison, where
the family environment does not provide adequate social learning, school
provides a means for reaching a large number of children and young people:
If you take the assumption that maybe parents are not providing
the attitudinal education that kids need, you have to look at alternative
vehicles to do that and teach what is appropriate behaviour. A school, even
though it is very busy in terms of its curriculum, is obviously an ideal venue
to do that at varying ages. I am a quite big believer in the use of school for
not just teaching reading, writing and arithmetic but also teaching social
behaviour that you wish to have enforced through the community—appropriate
standards of behaviour, as simple as public courtesy and all the way through to
not assaulting people.[18]
4.18
Representing the Foundation for Young Australians (FYA), Mr Charby
Ibrahim explained to the Committee:
We want young people to respect each other and to be able to
empathise and sympathise and to develop a range of behaviours, but I do not
think those things are necessarily innate all the time. Also, it is not as
though they are explicitly taught within everybody’s nuclear family, not that
the nuclear family is the norm anymore anyway. I really believe that there has
to be very specific education within schools, not just violence prevention but
a broader respect for relationships ...[19]
4.19
Also focusing on schools as a portal for social development education, the
submission from UnitingCare Children, Young People and Families (UCCYPF)
stated:
Probably the most important point for addressing violent
behaviour is within the education system. Schools enable prevention and early
intervention programs to reach a large number of young people and present a
valuable opportunity to provide support for children and young people who are
displaying or experiencing violent or antisocial behaviour.[20]
4.20
Comments to the Committee from young people themselves were generally
favourable to integrating social development education into schools. As explained
by a young participant from the inquiry’s Youth Forum in Melbourne:
... [we need to] teach people how to recognise violence and
how to deal with it from a very young age. It could maybe be put into the
curriculum when they are starting school. And it should not just be their
teachers who teach them, but someone with some credibility—someone who has had
experience in that area or a role model or someone like that—who would come in
and teach these kids about the issue and how to deal with it, whether it be at
home, on the street or in the school and whether it be cyberbullying or
whatever.[21]
4.21
Another young participant emphasised the need for early intervention and
sustained social development capacity building, saying:
We need to teach [young children] that even emotional
bullying is not on, giving the conflict resolution skills at that age and then
moving on to high school and equipping families with the capacity to deal with
that at home as well and to educate their children. We talked about teachers
possibly being equipped with the skills to deal with violence in terms of
taking preventative measures rather than addressing the issue when it happens.[22]
4.22
The following comments on social development education were made by respondents
to the inquiry’s online youth survey:
Educate (especially in schools)
about the possible outcomes of violence and bullying. Female, under 18
years, rural/remote
Have a proper education
program. Most young people are getting no or wrong behavioural advice from
their home environment e.g. lots of parents in 30/45 year old category know
nothing of family life, family values and moral behaviour. Male, 18-24 years,
regional city
Make it compulsory in schools
to make the students aware of the repercussions and how violence among young
people can change a person’s life for the worse. Female, under 18 years,
rural/remote
Some young people I know think
it is okay to start a fight with someone when you disagree with them. I think
teaching people how to express themselves in words and in logical ways would
help them. Female, 18-24 years old, capital city
Violence has to be bred out of
people by educating them about the more important aspects of life such as love,
respect, human advancement, mental expansion, scientific exploration, arts,
culture, music, creativity -this is the way to feed positive thought to those
who need it and when they are occupied by these sorts of activities and life
goals, then they will cease their senseless violent activity. Female, 18-24
years, capital city
4.23
While prevention of violence among young people is the ideal, some
submissions identified the need to provide assistance for those who are at
increased risk of violence or who have already been involved in violence either
as a perpetrator or victim. In the school setting, it was suggested that better
access to support from school counsellors, social workers or school chaplains
is needed to prevent escalation of violence or repeat involvement.[23]
The following comment was made by a respondent to the inquiry’s online youth
survey:
Provide more counsellors for
victims to talk to and not just friends even though friends can be good in the
short term, what good is it in the long term? Male, under 18 years, capital
city
Committee Comment
4.24
In view of the volume and
strength of evidence to the inquiry, the Committee concludes that social
development programs which teach and support effective interpersonal communication,
life skills and pro-social behaviours will be an essential component of an
early intervention and prevention strategy to reduce violence. With regard to
effective implementation, the Committee understands the importance of
initiating social development with very young children, including pre-school
children, and continuing to support social skills capacity building in a
developmentally appropriate framework.
4.25
The Committee believes that delivering social development programs
through early education facilities and schools will have a number of benefits. Firstly,
delivery through formal education systems will ensure that social development
programs reach the vast majority of children and young people. Secondly,
program delivery through these systems will ensure that understandings are
consistent and will eliminate the perception of stigmatisation if the program
were delivered to ‘at risk’ students only.
4.26
To ensure that social development programs are provided nationally, the
Committee strongly supports the inclusion of social development as a core
component of the national curriculum for kindergarten to year 12. The national
curriculum is being progressively developed by the Australian Curriculum,
Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA), which in turn reports to the
Ministerial Council for Education, Early Childhood Development and Youth
Affairs (MCEECDYA). The Committee notes that development, consultation and
implementation of phases 1 and 2[24] of the National
Curriculum are well progressed and due to be implemented by 2011.[25]
4.27
Therefore, and in view of the volume and strength of evidence to the
inquiry, the Committee recommends that MCEECDYA include social development
education and training as an essential component in phase 3 developments for
the national curriculum.
Recommendation 2 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Ministerial Council for
Education, Early Childhood Development and Youth Affairs include social
development education and training as an essential component in phase 3
developments for the national curriculum. |
4.29
With regard specifically to bullying, the Committee notes the 2009 Bullying
of Children and Young People report produced by the General Purposes
Standing Committee No 2 of the NSW Legislative Council. The report makes 25
recommendations which address a range of issues including:
n provision of more
support and guidance to assist schools with the implementation of anti-bullying
programs;
n improved training for
teachers on how to identify and intervene in bullying situations;
n recruitment of
additional school counsellors and more support for access to external counselling
services for students;
n the need for
anti-bullying education to be implemented as part of a broad focus on student
well-being;
n the need to increase
community awareness of the harmful effects of bullying and effect changes in
attitudes to bullying; and
n the need to develop
and implement a range of strategies to specifically address cyber-bullying.[26]
4.30
The Committee believes that its own recommendation to make social
development programs an essential part of the national curriculum will be
instrumental in reducing bullying behaviour by promoting respectful
relationships and tolerance of diversity. However, the Committee also appreciates
as cyber-bullying is a relatively recent phenomenon, that different approaches
may be required to address this issue.
4.31
Therefore, the Committee is pleased to note that cyber-bullying is one
aspect of cyber-safety being investigated in more detail by the recently established
Joint Select Committee Inquiry into Cyber-Safety.[27]
The Committee looks forward to viewing the recommendations made in relation to
cyber-bullying in due course.
4.32
In the meantime, the Committee is encouraged to see that the Australian
Government has already proceeded to take action to address cyber-safety for
young people through its Cybersmart initiative.[28]
The Cybersmart website developed by the Australian Communications and Media
Authority (ACMA) provides parents, teachers, librarians, children and young
people with up-to-date, comprehensive
and age appropriate online cyber-safety
resources and assistance.
4.33
With regard to bullying and violence occurring in schools, the Committee
notes that the National Safe Schools Framework (NSSF) is currently under
review. Introduced in 2003, the NSSF:
... consists of a set of nationally agreed principles for
safe and supportive school environments and includes appropriate responses that
schools can adopt to address the issues of bullying, harassment, violence, and
child abuse and neglect.[29]
4.34
As noted below, the emergence of new communications technology is also
the driver for the NSSF review:
Since the NSSF was first implemented in schools there has
been an emergence of new technologies such as mobile phones and computers.
These new technologies have resulted in a new type of bullying known as cyber
bullying.
The NSSF also needs to incorporate recent changes to
legislation regarding online crimes. Schools have expressed their concerns
about their areas of responsibility given that many bullying activities now
follow students home, or begin at home, through the use of computers and mobile
phones.[30]
4.35
The Committee understands that the review of the NSSF is due to be
completed by mid 2010 and presented to MCEECDYA for endorsement. The Committee
looks forward to the release of the revised NSSF.
4.36
For young victims of violence, but also for perpetrators of violence who
are frequently facing challenges of their own, the Committee believes that
access to support and counselling services for students is critical to the early
identification of problems and assisting young people to improve their social
skills and to build resilience. While recognising that the provision of school
counselling services is the responsibility of state and territory government departments
of education, in accordance with recommendation 17 of the NSW 2009 Report on
Bullying of Children and Young People[31] the Committee urges
action by state and territory education departments to recruit additional
school counsellors.
4.37
However, the Committee believes that a broader approach to the
provision of youth counselling and support services is needed to ensure
adequate availability and access. Therefore, the Committee welcomes the additional
$79 million funding announced in the 2010 budget to support additional ‘youth
friendly’ mental health services provided by Headspace, including drug and
alcohol services. The additional funding, to be rolled out over four years,
will deliver up to 30 new youth-friendly services as well as providing extra
funding for the existing 30 Headspace sites.[32]
4.38
The Committee believes that establishing partnerships to facilitate
referral of students to community-based youth counselling services, such as
those provided by Headspace, could provide a means for addressing shortages of
counselling services, particularly where school services are limited or
oversubscribed. Therefore the Committee recommends that the Australian
Government, in consultation with state and territory governments and
non-government stakeholders, examine options for establishing partnerships
between departments of education and community-based service providers. The
intention of these partnerships is to facilitate the referral of students to
external counselling and support services where required and appropriate.
Recommendation 3 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government, in
consultation with state and territory governments and non-government
stakeholders, examine options for establishing partnerships between
departments of education and community-based service providers to facilitate
referral of students to external counselling and support services where
required and appropriate. |
4.40
In addition, the Committee also notes that the Australian Government
provides complementary support to school counselling services through the National
School Chaplaincy Program (NSCP). For participating schools[33],
the NSCP offers advice and guidance about ethics, values and relationships.[34]
The NSCP program is currently being reviewed by the Department of Education,
Employment and Workplace Relations. The review is being informed by a national
consultation with key stakeholders (i.e. state and territory education departments,
major service providers, representatives of independent and faith based school
systems, peak representative bodies for parent and community organisations,
principals and other relevant interest groups). The national consultation
process aims to:
... consider the achievements and effectiveness of the NSCP,
and its relationship with other student support activities. The process will
canvass stakeholder views and issues in relation to future chaplaincy and
pastoral care services, and other student support activities. A number of key
issues will be examined including:
n NSCP achievements
n relationship of the
NSCP with other student support activities
n what is/is not
working well
n current and future
needs
n potential target
group(s)/priority areas
n possible future
program options
n funding model/mechanisms
and funding requirements.[35]
4.41
While noting the potential of the NSCP to provide students with pastoral
care and spiritual guidance, the Committee notes that this is not a substitute
for professional counselling or support services for students. In situations
where demand for counselling services is high or in circumstances where student
issues are complex, some students that initially approach school chaplains for
advice may need to be referred to professional counselling services, either
school services or external services.
4.42
To improve access to student counselling and support services, the
Committee believes mandatory training for all school chaplains to assist with
the early identification of students who may require professional assistance is
essential. Furthermore, and as noted above, the Committee believes that establishment
of partnerships and formal mechanisms for referral to other youth support
services, including external counselling services, will enhance and extend the
range of professional counselling options available to students.
Recommendation 4 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Department of Education,
Employment and Workplace Relations, as part of its review of the National
School Chaplaincy Program, enhance and extend access to professional counselling
and support service for students by:
n introducing
mandatory training for all school chaplains to assist them with early
identification of students who may require professional assistance; and
n establishing
partnerships and formal mechanisms for referral from the National School
Chaplaincy Program to other student counselling or youth support
services, including external counselling services where appropriate. |
Relational
4.44
Relational approaches are generally aimed at influencing the
relationships that young people have with those that they interact with on a
regular basis, such as family members and peers. Interventions are generally
aimed at providing parents with effective parenting skills and supporting good
family and peer relationships.
Family Relationships
4.45
The importance of stable, healthy and nurturing parenting and good family
relationships raised frequently in evidence to the inquiry. As noted by Australian
Bahá’i Community:
The first source of values education is the family. By the
time children are old enough to enter school, they have unconsciously adopted
many of the values that they experience at home. It is recognised that parental
behaviour (particularly neglect or coercion) is a leading cause of violence
amongst young people.[36]
4.46
Positive parenting, including the provision of consistent messages,
teaching children and young people to understand and respect boundaries was
seen by many inquiry participants to be fundamental to establishing pro-social
behaviour patterns and avoiding violence.[37] However, parenting
skills were also seen by many to be deficient, particularly in certain family
circumstances (e.g. those involving economic hardship, inadequate housing,
domestic violence, parental substance abuse, lack of parental education).[38]
The following comments on parenting were made by respondents to the inquiry’s
on-line youth survey:
Some people just need better
parents. Female, under 18 years, rural/remote
Teach the parents how to raise
their kids so they have guidelines, support and a conscience so they will have
enough respect for others to not disrespect them in any way. Female, under
18 years, regional city
4.47
In situations of intergenerational disadvantage, it was suggested that today’s
parents may themselves have lacked the benefit of good parental role models to
teach them positive parenting skills.
4.48
Once again, early intervention to encourage the development of
effective, stable and supportive relationships within families was considered
by many to be critical.[39] The Commissioner for
Children and Young People (WA) stressed the importance of early identification
of families at risk, suggesting:
Focusing efforts to support families in the early years with
universal screening and information, and with targeted support for families
identified with increased risk profiles is essential to improving the risk and
protective factor balance for children and young people.[40]
4.49
Some evidence to the inquiry called for universal access to pre-natal
and post-natal nurse visitation programs for new mothers to identify parents
that may require additional assistance.[41] Evidence also called for
increased access to positive parenting programs and programs to facilitate and
promote strong and healthy parent/child relationships.[42]
Support for positive parenting and family relationships capacity building initiatives
in evidence to the inquiry includes reference to a large number of
interventions such as the Positive Parenting Program (Triple P), Communities
for Children, Brighter Futures and Bringing up Boys.[43]
Committee Comment
4.50
The Committee notes the availability of a number of Australian
Government and state/territory government programs to assist with building and
developing strong, stable and healthy family relationships. For example, as
part of the NSW State Plan, the Committee notes the commitment made by the NSW Government by
2011 to:
n provide routine
ante-natal and post-natal psychosocial assessments for all women who use the
public system to identify any issues or areas of difficulty;
n offer all new parents
a nurse home visit;
n offer parenting
education to all parents of children aged 3-8 years by 2011; and
n extend its Brighter
Futures Program, a program which aims to improve the level of support
available to vulnerable families by providing access to a range of services,
such as quality child care, case management, parenting programs and home
visiting.[44]
4.51
Furthermore, the Committee understands that the Australian Government is
offering a number of interventions under its Family Support Program.
Family and parenting services which provide early intervention and prevention
services are a core component of the program, which aims to assist families to
build and strengthen relationships, develop life skills and enhance relationships
between parents and children.[45] Of particular relevance
to the inquiry is the Communities for Children initiative which provides
more that $100 million between 2009-10 to 2011-12 to promote protective factors
such as good ante-natal and maternal health and nutrition, good parental
communication, positive parenting, family harmony and participation in broader
social networks.[46] The program focuses on
families with children up to 12 years of age who are at risk of disadvantage
and operates at 45 sites around Australia.
4.52
In view of the expansion of a number of state based and national
strategies to increase the resilience of children and young people by supporting
the development of supportive and healthy family relationships, the Committee
stops short of making specific recommendations. However, the Committee
anticipates that the efficacy of these interventions will be assessed in due
course through rigorous evaluation. The critical importance of program
evaluation is considered in more detail in Chapter 5.
Peer Relationships
4.53
As children grow older, the influence of parents decreases while the
influence of peers increases. As noted in Chapter 3, peer pressure can be
difficult for young people to resist. Where peer pressure involves anti-social
behaviour and violence and the influence on behaviour is negative, positive
messages from peers can also be powerful tools for encouraging positive behaviour.[47]
The potential for peer influence to encourage positive behaviour was emphasised
in the submission from Voices Against Violence which observed:
Young guys are probably the biggest influencers - they need
to all step up and stop their stupid mates before they do something stupid.
Don't encourage the behaviour by relishing in the stories of the fight he got
into on the weekend - tell him he is an idiot.
If you've got a mate that gets aggressive when he has too
much - stop him before he drinks too much. Young girls also play a big part.
Also all need to stand up and give a clear message they don't want to be with
someone that likes to punch on. Girls need to send a clear message that they
are not impressed by thuggish behaviour.[48]
4.54
As explained by Step Back Think and the Foundation for Young Australians,
peer influence is a significant component of the No Regrets program.[49]
In brief, as outlined by Step Back Think, No Regrets:
... targets years 9 to 12, with a focus on peer leadership
and giving ownership of the problem to students. With the help of a number of
volunteers and members of Step Back Think, ‘No Regrets’ enables students
to come up with ideas and methods for addressing issues of violence and
problems of disrespect. It gives them the opportunity to think about ways of
dealing with confrontational situations and aims to dispel myths over issues of
violence, drugs and alcohol and the ability to make your own decisions.[50]
4.55
In Brisbane, the Committee heard evidence relating to Red Frogs, another
peer influence intervention. Red Frogs employs young volunteers to
support school-leavers through schoolies weeks by providing a positive presence
and practical support for young people within their party culture. Mr Leigh
Drennan, a friend of Matthew Stanley who was tragically killed in 2005 at the
age of 15 years as a result of a violent attack, described his experience as a Red
Frogs volunteer on the Gold Coast as follows:
Probably the best example of [peer influence] was when I was
down at Schoolies. There were five 17-year-olds walking down Cavill Avenue, not
in a group but in a straight line—walking with the intention of knocking into
someone or hoping that they could get a reaction out of someone. I happened to
walk past them as a Red Frog worker, so I just went over to them and asked them
if they wanted some red frogs. I ended up getting into a discussion with them
and I talked about Matt and my friendship with Matt and how badly it had cut me
up when he died. By the time I finished my discussion with them, their whole
body language had changed. They walked away one behind the other. They went
from having the intention of looking for a fight, going out at night and
wanting to fight someone and getting into some sort of trouble, to being so affected
by hearing my story that they walked away with totally different intentions for
the night.[51]
Committee Comment
4.56
In addition to the increased risks of experiencing violence as a result
of exposure to anti-social peer pressure, the Committee also recognises the very
real potential for young people to exert positive influences on their peers. Rather
than using ‘authority’ figures to transfer knowledge and skills, peer educators
and volunteers use approaches and styles of communication which overcome
traditional generational communication barriers. Furthermore, through their
participation in education and guidance initiatives, the young volunteers
themselves provide inspirational and positive peer role models for others.
4.57
As with interventions at individual and community levels, the Committee
understands the need for peer education programs and interventions to be
rigorously evaluated. However, the Committee also believes that it is important
for young people to be seen as part of the solution to youth violence rather
than solely the cause of the problem. In this regard the Committee is aware
that a number of inquiry participants have called for young people to be
actively engaged in developing strategies to tackle youth violence.[52]
4.58
The Committee agrees that seeking input from young people is essential to
devising and implementing solutions to youth violence that are going to work
for them. Indeed as part of its own inquiry the Committee has sought to engage
with young people and to hear their views through the inquiry’s online survey,
and through talking to young people at public hearings and informal meetings.
The Committee found this input to be invaluable, and acknowledges that young
people themselves best understand the issues confronting them.
4.59
Therefore, the Committee strongly supports the Australian Government’s approach
to opening channels of communication between Government and young people
through the Australian Youth Forum (AYF) and other consultative fora to
identify issues of importance to youth and to actively engage young people in
developing solutions.
Community
4.60
Community approaches to reducing youth violence generally aim to
increase a young person’s connectedness with their proximal social environment.
Risk and protective factors involve:
n engagement with schools/education;
n the built environment
and infrastructure;
n the availability of alcohol
and drugs; and
n the effectiveness of
law enforcement and policing.
Linking to Communities
4.61
The importance of establishing linkages between communities and young
people to reduce youth violence was raised by a number of inquiry participants.
For example, Mr Harry Hukin observed:
So many children do not get the nurturing that teaches
discrimination, that enables discretion and discernment and social responsibility
for the individual, so that they know they are part of the community, needed by
the family, that they themselves have responsibilities involving contributions
to society. In many ways they are left to fend for themselves.[53]
4.62
The Commissioner for Children and Young People (WA) suggested that:
Strategies that improve engagement with children, young
people and their communities are significant in addressing the impact of social
exclusion and disengagement that often translates into violent and antisocial
behaviour.[54]
Connections with School
4.63
Several submissions note that strong engagement with school,
characterised by good academic achievement and regular attendance, is a
protective factor against violence.[55] The following comment
was made by a respondent to the inquiry’s online youth survey:
EDUCATION!!! keep people in
school and that will reduce fights. Female, 18-24 years, regional city
4.64
The UCCYPF observed:
For young people who come from a disadvantaged background or
who have had few safe places in their lives, school represents a place where
they feel safe and can be protected and supported.[56]
4.65
Several submissions and witness statements raised concerns about the
value of punitive measures such as school suspensions and expulsions, suggesting
that children are likely disengage further from education and become more
marginalised.[57] As argued by ARACY:
While punitive approaches to violent and antisocial behaviour
among young people (including school suspension or incarceration in juvenile
justice facilities) may have short-term political and public appeal, we submit
that policies and programs which have the effect of further alienating young
people from constructive social engagement are likely to be counter-productive
in the long term.[58]
4.66
Based on the outcomes of their own research, the University of
Melbourne’s Centre for Adolescent Health reported:
We found that students who had been suspended from school
were 70% more likely to engage in antisocial behaviour 12 months later. This
effect was found even after examining the role of established influences such
as family conflict and association with violent peers. Finding less punitive
ways of dealing with challenging student behaviour may be one way to reduce
violence in our young people.[59]
4.67
UCCYPF suggested investigating alternatives to suspension and expulsion
as strategies for managing anti-social and violent behaviours in schools,
including implementing solutions that focus on effecting behavioural change.[60]
4.68
Evidence to the inquiry, including statements made during informal
discussions with young people and youth workers in Perth, suggests that young
people are not always effectively supported during periods of suspension. Explaining
that suspension and expulsion were sometimes seen as a reward or ‘badge of
honour’ for violent behaviour, Jakob, a participant of the inquiry’s Youth
Forum told the Committee:
We agreed that schools are far too lenient in their
deterrents. Suspension is virtually a reward. Who wouldn’t want to sit on the
couch for a week and watch TV?[61]
4.69
The importance of useful occupation during periods of suspension and for
those young people who have disengaged completely from mainstream education was
raised by the Centre for Multicultural Youth (CMY) which suggested that there
is a need for:
Targeted and relevant alternative programs for those students
who have been expelled or otherwise ‘let go’ from mainstream education.[62]
Committee Comment
4.70
The Committee is aware of evidence showing that strong engagement with school
reduces the risk of involvement in violence for a young person, while disengagement
increases the risk of involvement. Low academic achievement and school failure
were both factors associated with increased risks of disengagement from school.
In this regard, and in accordance with the identified preference for early
intervention, the Committee notes the introduction of the Early Years
Learning Framework (EYLF). The EYLF is part of COAG’s broader reform agenda
for early childhood education and care. The EYLF is a key component of the National
Quality Framework which will put in place new National Quality Standards
to ensure high quality and consistent early childhood education and care across
Australia.[63] In brief, the EYLF:
... describes the principles, practice and outcomes essential
to support and enhance young children’s learning from birth to five years of
age, as well as their transition to school. The Framework has a strong emphasis
on play-based learning as play is the best vehicle for young children’s
learning providing the most appropriate stimulus for brain development. The
Framework also recognises the importance of communication and language
(including early literacy and numeracy) and social and emotional development.[64]
4.71
The EYLF is to be progressively implemented starting from July 2010,
with full implementation commencing in 2012. The Committee believes that the
EYLF will provide a nationally available mechanism to assist children from an
early age to maximise their engagement with education and to manage the
sometimes difficult transition to school.
4.72
An area of concern for the Committee, however, remains the widespread
use of school suspension and expulsion. While recognising that schools need to
have strategies for dealing with students who are disruptive, the Committee is
concerned by evidence that suggests suspension and expulsion, particularly in
the absence of adequate supports, is likely to increase student disengagement
further.
4.73
In this regard the Committee notes information provided by the ACT
Government relating to the trial of a pilot program which provides access for
suspended students and their families to a suspension support team (SST)
comprising a psychologist, a social worker and a school management consultant.
Through the program the SST will provide advice and support for families and
schools for addressing the issues responsible for the suspension. The pilot is
due to be evaluated at the end of 2010.[65]
4.74
Although school suspension and expulsion policies are the responsibility
of state and territory government departments of education the Committee urges
jurisdictions to review the policies with a particular focus on providing
support for suspended students to assist them to reengage with education.
The Built Environment and Infrastructure
4.75
A number of submissions emphasised the importance of the built
environment and infrastructure in developing connectedness with the
neighbourhood and reducing crime and violence. Problem behaviours are most
likely to occur in areas that suffer from overcrowding and where rapid
population growth means that the needs of the community exceed the capacity of
available services. For example, the Gold Coast City Council (GCCC) observed:
High rates of population growth have placed pressure upon the
planning, provision and management of social infrastructure. There are major
short falls in community facilities and services across the [Gold Coast],
particularly in the north, where there is a high need for community facilities,
affordable housing, sport and recreation facilities, community development
services, public transport services, and individual and family support
services. The lack of social facilities and services, increases young people’s
vulnerability to crime and violence.[66]
4.76
To address this the GCCC recommended an expansion of the Regional Local
Community Infrastructure Program (RLCIP), an Australian Government program
administered by the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional
Development and Local Government (DITRDLG) which provides funding to local
government authorities to assist with building and modernising of community
infrastructure.[67]
4.77
Several submissions identified the need for young people to have access
to appropriately located and well designed ‘youth friendly’ spaces, including public
spaces, where young people can congregate safely and also feel part of the
wider community.[68] The following comment
was made by a respondent to the inquiry’s online youth survey:
In neighbourhoods that are
known for trouble, (e.g. drugs, violence, gangs etc), there needs to be places
where youth can go, hang out and play games such as billiards or playstation,
and there can also be information about schools, tafes and uni's and jobs that
they can do after school. Also details of voluntary work that is available. Female,
under 18 years, regional city
4.78
Research shows that young people frequently report feeling unsafe in
public areas. While many young people congregate in groups for social reasons,
some also report doing so for their own safety. However, groups of young people
in public places are generally viewed with suspicion by the community and may
be perceived as intimidating or threatening. The Commissioner for Children and
Young People (WA) noted the outcome of a recent survey which reported that more
than 50% of children surveyed felt that they were not made to feel welcome in
public spaces.[69]
4.79
According to the submission from Youthlaw & Frontyard Youth Services,
research shows that the use of ‘move on’ powers to disperse groups from public
areas have not been successful in reducing crime.[70]
Rather, several submissions recommended more active engagement with children
and young people in designing youth friendly public spaces and facilities.[71]
4.80
Access to reliable and safe public transport emerged as a significant
infrastructure issue for young people. Young people are reliant on public
transport and many have identified public transport, including train stations,
bus interchanges and taxi-ranks, as high risk areas.[72]
Shortages of public transport at night and in the vicinity of entertainment
precincts when venues close was raised as particular issues.[73]
Commenting on this, Step Back Think observed:
Taxi ranks are rare and patrons are often refused service
because their fare is apparently insufficient. Thousands of people are forced
to squabble over taxis and mill around in the city late at night, sometimes for
hours.
Public transport is limited after midnight and as a result,
train stations become isolated places. A cycle ensues as stations have a
reputation for being unsafe places. This drives the number of commuters down,
meaning transport companies cannot justify running late night services.[74]
4.81
In addition to increasing the availability of public transport, suggestions
for improvements to public transport safety included better lighting, increased
surveillance and monitoring and an increased security presence.[75]
The following comments were made by respondents to the inquiry’s online youth
survey:
Definitely need more night time
public transport to keep people off the street at late hours. Male, under 18
years, capital city
Bus interchanges in Canberra
are a no-go zone after dark, and I worry a lot about assaults on campus at
night too. Public transport should be a lot more frequent at night so people
aren't left stranded or forced to walk home. Female, 18-24 years, capital
city
Have better guards and police
on public transport. It's really unsafe at night and I know people talk about
gangs and drunk people on trains having fights. Male, under 18 years,
capital city
Committee Comment
4.82
The Committee recognises the important influence of the built
environment and infrastructure to developing cohesive and strong communities.
Access to a range of services for families and individuals, particularly in
areas of high population density or experiencing rapid population growth, is
critical. For young people specifically, who often do not have access to their
own ‘private space’, youth friendly public spaces and facilities are important
realms in which to socialise. The dependence of young people on public
transport also makes them particularly vulnerable to deficiencies and risks in
public transport infrastructure.
4.83
While responsibility for infrastructure generally lies with
state/territory governments and/or local government authorities, the Committee notes
the support that has been provided to local government authorities for
community infrastructure under the RLCIP. Two rounds of RLCIP funding totalling
$1.2 billion have been provided to support a diverse range of infrastructure
projects. Funded projects have included development and improvement of social
and cultural infrastructure (e.g. sports grounds and recreations facilities), youth
facilities (e.g. community and youth centres) and public transport
infrastructure. The RLCIP was part of the Australian Government’s Nation
Building Economic Stimulus Plan.
4.84
The Committee believes that additional strategic funding to develop community
infrastructure, specifically youth friendly public spaces, youth facilities and
improved public transport infrastructure will help to develop and support
connectedness of young people with their communities. Therefore, the Committee
recommends that the DITRDLG provide additional strategic funding for the
development of community infrastructure to assist communities to become more
‘youth friendly’. The funding should be awarded on a competitive basis to local
government authorities that can demonstrate communities with the greatest need
for additional social/cultural facilities and/or infrastructure to support
youth. These could include communities experiencing rapid population growth, or
more established communities with inadequate or ageing infrastructure.
Recommendation 5 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Department of
Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government provide
additional strategic funding for the development of community infrastructure
to support communities to become more ‘youth friendly’. The funding should be
awarded on a competitive basis to local government authorities that can
demonstrate communities with the greatest need for social/cultural facilities
and/or infrastructure to support youth. |
4.86
Bearing in mind that urban planning and infrastructure are primarily responsibilities
of state and territory governments and local authorities rather than of Australian
Government, the Committee also strongly encourages the responsible authorities
to actively engage with young people when planning youth friendly public spaces,
youth specific facilities and in the planning the provision of adequate and
safe public transport options.
Alcohol and Violence
4.87
Availability and access to alcohol and other drugs, as well as tolerant attitudes
towards alcohol consumption and drug use at family, local and community levels
are factors known to increase the risk of becoming involved in violence. As
noted in Chapter 3, although use of illegal drugs is believed to contribute to youth
violence, consumption of alcohol is the most concerning issue due to levels of
drinking in the community and the well established association between alcohol and
violence. A number of inquiry participants also observed that drinking alcohol is
part of Australia’s social and cultural fabric. As such, alcohol and alcohol-related
violence is not only a ‘youth’ issue, but part of a wider social issue.
4.88
While using social marketing to change community attitudes towards
alcohol is considered in Chapter 5 of the report, this Chapter addresses issues
associated with control and regulation. There was widespread support in
evidence for governments to explore and implement a diverse range of measures
to reduce the harmful consumption of alcohol and associated alcohol-fuelled
violence.[76] Common suggestions
include:
n
enacting nationally consistent liquor licensing legislative
reforms to restrict access to alcohol by decreasing the physical and
economic availability of alcohol (e.g. by raising the minimum legal drinking
age, increasing taxes on alcohol, restricting the density of alcohol outlets
and restricting outlet opening times, mandatory responsible service of alcohol
(RSA) training for staff at licensed venues);[77]
n enacting nationally consistent
liquor licensing legislative reforms to mitigate against the risks of alcohol-fuelled
violence by improving the physical environment in licensed premises (e.g.
reducing overcrowding by establishing national standards for occupancy loading,
reducing ‘vertical drinking’[78] environments by
requiring floor plans to include dance floors, seating areas and quiet areas
etc);[79]
n improved policing and
enforcement of liquor control laws and regulations;[80]
n limiting the way
alcohol is advertised and served to young people and raising awareness of the
linkages between consumption of alcohol and increased levels of violence;[81]
and
n developing nationally
consistent principles and practices regarding supply of alcohol to minors
(secondary supply), including legislation around the service of alcohol to
minors on private premises.[82]
4.89
One of the challenges identified with regard to increasing and enforcing
stronger liquor control measures relates to the deregulation of the liquor
industry. Specifically, it was noted that the National Competition Policy (NCP)
which requires states/territories to remove regulatory obstacles to competition
in all industries, including the liquor industry, has contributed to the ready
availability and accessibility of alcohol.[83] Although it is possible
for an industry to be exempted from NCP on the basis of the ‘public interest’, according
to Step Back Think:
... minimising of harm has come off second-best in the
pursuit of a competitive, alcohol-fuelled market.[84]
4.90
Although support for increased controls and restrictions to be applied
to the liquor industry was widespread in evidence to the inquiry, it was not
universal. The submission from the Australian Hotels Association (AHA) argued
that no further controls are needed, noting that the liquor industry is already
subject to extensive regulation.[85]
4.91
A number of submissions commented favourably on voluntary participation
in local liquor accords, which bring together a range of stakeholders to reduce
harmful drinking, including representatives of the liquor industry and
community representatives.[86] To complement this form
of self-regulation, Step Back Think proposed establishing an interactive
website called Rate Your Venue. Step Back Think described their proposal
as follows:
Marketed as a gig guide this website would provide
information about live music, good food, events and promotions, while also
offering a safety rating based primarily on patron feedback but also on
Victorian police statistics. The website would tackle, amongst other things,
information about whether bouncers are ‘male friendly’ or unnecessarily violent
at a particular venue, the street lighting, how long queues tend to be and
whether it’s easy to get transport (particularly taxis) to and from a venue.[87]
4.92
Also in support of a collaborative approach with the liquor industry,
Mr Adair Donaldson of Province Promotions noted the potential for
unintended consequences with over-regulation, observing:
I also think we need to adopt a collaborative approach with
the alcohol industry, rather than an adversarial approach ... Here in
Queensland, the government was naming and shaming venues and putting further
licensing controls on them. In the past the publicans had been cooperating with
the police. If somebody was acting up in their hotel they would hold them until
the police arrived and then pass them over to the police and provide all the
imagery to ensure the most successful chance of a prosecution. But, of course,
as soon as that started counting against them, they thought, ‘Bugger this,
what’s the point in doing that? We might as well grab him, put him outside and
then ban him from coming into the venue.’ There was no benefit for them to do
the right thing.[88]
4.93
The possibility of other unintended consequences of restricting access
to alcohol was raised by a number of inquiry participants. For example, with
regard to raising the legal drinking age, Simon, a participant of the Melbourne
Youth Forum noted:
We looked at the drinking age and how it has been talked
about being raised to 21. We thought that would not help; it would only
encourage people to go and drink in public places such as public transport, in
the park and wherever else. As we know, underage drinking does occur. It is
hard to stop. Raising the drinking age would create less safe environments for
people to go and drink, so would only increase the violence.[89]
4.94
Similarly the AHA also commented as follows:
If you make it harder for licensed premises, which are
subject to stringent regulatory behaviour requirements, to operate and you push
drinking behaviour out into the parks, the backyards and all of that, you are
actually going to create an environment where drinking will be less regulated
and the potential for uncontrolled violence will be more evident.[90]
4.95
The risk of alcohol price increases simply shifting activity from one
problem behaviour to another was also raised. As Mr Thomas McGuire of the AHA
told the Committee:
The problem we can see is that, the more expensive our drinks
become, the more attractive the [illegal] drug is.[91]
4.96
Similarly the National Council of Single Mothers and their Children (NCSMC)
observed:
One of the difficulties of drug and alcohol policies is that
restricting supply of one drug or form of supply can lead users to change to
more harmful substances which may be cheaper or more readily available. The
‘alcopop’ tax, for example, lead many young people to purchase spirits to mix
themselves, rather than use the more expensive, but dosage controlled,
pre-mixed drink. Policymakers in this area need to research the views and
behaviours of substance abusers to identify the impacts of proposed policies
and ensure that the planned policy will not shift users to more harmful
behaviour.[92]
4.97
In relation to underage drinking specifically, evidence shows that this tends
to occur away from licensed premises taking place most frequently in public
spaces (parks, public transport etc) and on private premises (parties at
private residences etc), creating a different set of risks.[93]
As explained by Mr Donaldson:
If, for one moment we have a look at the hotel as a drinking
environment, we know that every one of those people working there have to be
trained in the responsible service of alcohol and they have to have proper
security because they know that if they do not do those things there are going
to be tough penalties for them. However, when you look at drinking at private
premises, particularly at underage parties, invariably there is no security and
no monitoring of how much alcohol is being consumed. I believe there is far
greater risk for patrons in private premises than there is in licensed premises.[94]
4.98
On a number of occasions inquiry participants noted the role of family
members (including parents and siblings) and older friends in supplying alcohol
to people under the age of 18 years. The Australian Drug Foundation (ADF) described
the extent of ‘secondary supply’ of alcohol to under 18s noting:
Studies on how and where young drinkers acquire alcohol
reveal young people find it easy to obtain. Parents are the most common source
of alcohol for secondary school students, with 37% of 12- to 17-year-olds
indicating their parents gave them their last drink. The proportion of students
whose parents supplied them with alcohol was significantly greater among
younger students (39%) than older students (35%). The three main locations in
which current student drinkers consumed alcohol were the family home, a
friend’s home or at a party.[95]
4.99
The following comments were made by respondents to the inquiry’s online
youth survey:
Alcohol isn't just a problem
when sold straight from the store to young people, but many of them actually
get it from their parents or an older friend. Female, under 18 years,
regional city
Make the people responsible for
suppling alcohol to under 18s have greater penalties. Female, under 18
years, rural/remote
4.100
Some evidence noted that there are jurisdictional differences in
relation to the regulation of secondary supply of alcohol to minors on private
premises. Only three states (Queensland, NSW and Tasmania), have legislation
which places limits on the circumstances under which adults can supply alcohol
to minors on private premises. The ADF and others have recommended the
introduction of nationally consistent legislation based on the Queensland model
which:
... deems [supply of alcohol to minors on private premises]
illegal unless the young person’s parent or responsible adult has given prior
approval; the amount of alcohol supplied is not excessive; and the server
provides adequate supervision of the young person. Otherwise provision of
alcohol to young people is regarded as ‘irresponsible supply’ and is unlawful. [96]
4.101
Proponents of this approach however also stress the need for secondary
supply sanctions to be accompanied by a national comprehensive communication
and education campaign targeting both parents and teenagers.[97]
Committee Comment
4.102
The Committee acknowledges that the vast majority of Australians consume
alcohol at safe levels and behave responsibly. Nevertheless, the evidence
regarding the impact of irresponsible and excessive alcohol consumption,
including evidence linking alcohol consumption with increased risks of being
involved in violence, is compelling. In this environment the Committee understands
that reducing the harmful effects of alcohol is an area of active concern for
the community and for policy makers at all levels of government.
4.103
Of particular relevance, the Committee notes recommendations made in two
recent reports that have examined options for minimising the harmful effects of
alcohol, including alcohol-related violence. Firstly, in September 2009 the
National Preventative Health Taskforce published its National Preventative
Health Strategy: Australia the healthiest country by 2020.[98]
The Taskforce’s report identified a number of key action areas for reducing the
harmful effects of alcohol through a range of fiscal, regulatory and social
marketing measures.
4.104
Then in March 2010 the Law, Justice and Safety Committee of the
Queensland Legislative Assembly released the report from its Inquiry into
Alcohol-Related Violence.[99] Broadly endorsing the
recommendations of the National Preventative Health Taskforce, the Legislative
Assembly’s report makes a total of 68 recommendations addressing a wide range
of issues, and includes recommendations to:
n mitigate risks in
licensed venues (e.g. by mandating RSA training for staff, encouraging improved
electronic surveillance in and around venues, limiting trading hours,
restricting the use glass etc);
n improve the
enforcement of liquor licensing laws by increasing resources to support
enforcement by the relevant government officials and by increasing police numbers
in entertainment precincts at times of high activity;
n provide improved
access to public transport to assist with the safe and efficient departure of
large numbers of patrons from entertainment precincts when venues close;
n restrict alcohol
promotional activities, including implementing bans on advertising of discount
liquor;
n support the
development of local liquor accords; and
n foster positive
cultural change in community attitudes towards alcohol.
4.105
In May 2010 the Australian Government released its response to the
Taskforce’s recommendations, Taking Preventative Action: A response to
Australia the healthiest country by 2020. Therefore the Committee understands
that the Australian Government has already committed to a number of key actions
aimed at reducing the harmful effects of alcohol. In this context the Committee
particularly adds it support to initiatives being progressed through COAG and the
Ministerial Council on Drug Strategy (MCDS) to:
n harmonise liquor
control laws and regulations across states and territories;
n to implement best
practice policing and enforcement measures; and
n to support community
inclusive initiatives such as liquor accords.
4.106
The Committee is also strongly in favour of the Government’s support for
developing a nationally consistent approach and strengthening legislation
relating to secondary supply of alcohol to minors. The Committee will present
its views later in the report on the use of social marketing campaigns to
effect cultural change in community attitudes to alcohol.
4.107
The Committee notes that a number of submissions to the inquiry have suggested
that restrictions to liquor licensing should be linked to reforms to the NCP.
However, the Committee feels that it would be inappropriate to utilise the NCP,
which is essentially an economic policy framework to support the principles of
commercial freedom, to bring about social policy outcomes. Instead, the
Committee believes that a national policy approach comprising the suite of initiatives
currently being progressed through COAG will have a more direct and significant
effect on reducing the harmful effects of alcohol, including alcohol-related
violence impacting on young Australians.
Best Practice Policing
4.108
At community level, effective policing and enforcement of laws have been
identified as important protective factors against violence. As noted by the Australian
Institute of Criminology (AIC):
There is a great deal of evidence that suggests that police
practices can also have an impact on crime. It should be noted however that
while some police practices can reduce crime, others may have no impact, and
still others may actually inadvertently increase crime. Importantly, police
often come into contact with at-risk young people before other agencies. As
such, they can play a crucial role in reducing youth violence.[100]
4.109
Highlighting the potential for tensions between young people and the
police, particularly in some communities, a participant of the inquiry’s
Melbourne Youth Forum explained:
The other issue is the police—they are totally against young
people. If we are to survive as a society—and we are the future—we need to have
the police on our side. We need them to look at us first. If we drink, smoke or
do whatever young people do these days, do not look at that—see the young
person first. A lot of young people get hurt by the police. A lot of
communities are afraid of them, so the police need to do mental health training
and to study psychology, sociology, people’s cultures and stuff and how to deal
with different communities. Some communities can be approached easily, while
some communities are very scared of the police.[101]
4.110
Another participant of the Youth Forum observed:
The police can act as a deterrent but there also needs to be
rapport between young people and the police so that young people do not feel
targeted by the police. They need to feel that the police are people that they
can go to. That would maybe enhance the reporting [of crime] because we
recognise that for young people it is quite difficult for them to report for
various reasons.[102]
4.111
Evidence has included a range of suggestions for optimising the
effectiveness of policing and law enforcement. Some have indicated that there
are demonstrable benefits associated with increasing the police presence in
areas of need and in known trouble ‘hotspots’ as this improves the capacity of
the police to respond rapidly to emerging issues and to prevent the escalation
of violence.[103] There was also a
significant level of support for community policing initiatives to build
positive relationships between law enforcement authorities and young people.[104]
Programs supported in evidence include the School Based Police Officers
Program, Adopt a Cop and initiatives such as the network of Police
and Citizens Youth Clubs (PCYC).[105]
4.112
The importance of policing strategies which are tailored to address the
needs of diverse groups of young people and communities was also raised For
example, the CMY observed:
There is a lack of cultural appropriateness and flexibility
within the police and justice system. Often there is a lack of translated
material available to a victim, an inadequate use of interpreters and a lack of
understanding of how the experience of being a refugee impacts on a young
person’s settlement in Australia.[106]
4.113
The CMY described its Youth Referral and Independent Persons Program (YRIPP)
as an example of a successful strategy to break down communication
barriers between culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) youth and law
enforcement officers, stating:
The Victorian Drugs and Crime Prevention Committee endorsed
the Youth Referral and Independent Person Program (YRIPP) as ‘an excellent
example’ of a strategy that tries to reduce offending and its effects by
breaking down communication and language barriers and providing culturally
diverse young people with access to a referral service that may be able to
provide further and specialised assistance.[107]
4.114
In informal discussions with police officers in Perth, the Committee
also heard about the important communication role played by designated multicultural
liaison officers working within the WA police force. There was additional support
in evidence for increased training for police, including those ‘on the front line’
in dealing with young people from diverse cultural backgrounds.[108]
4.115
Some evidence also advocated for a greater focus on crime prevention,
and identified the critical role of the police in effecting early intervention
and prevention of crime.[109] The Police Federation
of Australia (PFA) called for a collaborative approach to crime prevention
involving police forces and all levels of government working together
effectively to reduce crime impacting on young people.[110]
Using a US based program as an operational model of collaborative community policing,
the PFA proposed the establishment of an innovative crime prevention program in
Australia which brings the police and local communities together to address
issues of significance at the local level.[111]
4.116
Although noting limitations associated with the rigour of evaluations,
based on available data the AIC identified nine key principles of best policing
practice which apply to reducing levels of youth violence. In brief these
principles are:
n targeted approaches –
providing a police presence to reduce crime in areas where the need is
greatest;
n tailored approaches –
recognising that ‘one size does not fit all’, and responding to diverse need of
different cohorts of young people (e.g. women, Indigenous youth, young people from
CALD backgrounds etc);
n timeliness –
approaches that offer immediate responses to young people's offending behaviour
are likely to be more successful than those (such as courts) that involve
lengthy delays;
n early intervention
and prevention – policing initiatives that target offenders at young ages
and/or early in their offending trajectories;
n trust and
relationship building – approaches that increase this trust, and build healthy
relationships with communities, are likely to have positive long-term impacts
on levels of violence;
n respectful
interactions – evidence has shown that offenders who are treated with respect
by criminal justice personnel are less likely to reoffend;
n collaborative
approaches – programs that involve extensive inter-agency collaborations
frequently involving the police, youth workers, the community sector and young
people;
n sending clear
messages – initiatives that send clear and immediate responses to violent
behaviour; and
n targeting substance
misuse – initiatives that seek to address the misuse of alcohol and other drugs.[112]
4.117
The following comments on policing and law enforcement were made by respondents
to the inquiry’s online youth survey:
Provide more police, and in the
right places at the right time - Provide police with the POWER (laws) to deal
with it and then ENFORCE it (in the courts) - Reintroduce right moral
principles into society, which is in serious decline. Male, 18-24 years,
regional city
More Police, EXTREME toughness
on gangs or gang behaviour, offenders should be punished (not a slap on the
wrist) offenders usually get caught and go back to old habits without caring. Male,
18-24 years, regional city
Definitely need more police in
'trouble spots' and greater penalties for those initiating/ participating in
violent activities. Female, under 18 years, capital city
Bigger Police presence on the
street but we need police who are youth friendly and not just agro to everyone
they meet-the causes more aggression! It also makes young people have a fear
and hatred of the police force and not use them properly. Female, 18-24
years, capital city
I do not think more police
presence and restriction of opening hours for pubs and clubs is going to work
-you will simply create more tension for those youths who hold an
anti-authority mentality and they will have less time occupied in places where
they can be monitored by security. Female, 18-24 years, capital city
Committee Comment
4.118
The Committee notes the potential for best practice policing to build
and strengthen communities, and to reduce levels of violence involving young
people. During the inquiry the Committee had the opportunity to engage in
formal and informal discussions with serving police officers based in the ACT,
Queensland and WA. On these occasions the Committee was impressed by the
dedication and commitment of police officers to engaging constructively with
young people and communities to reduce levels of crime generally, and to
address issues of violence involving young people specifically.
4.119
In relation to reducing levels of youth offending, the Committee is
encouraged to see that the Australian Government and state/territory
governments have been working together through COAG to further the development
of best practice policing.[113] According to the
December 2009 COAG communiqué:
COAG endorsed the work of the Ministerial Council on Police
and Emergency Management, noting that best-practice policing is one element of
broader, holistic responses to youth offending. COAG asked Police Ministers to
work together to further develop best-practice policing, the features of which
could include:
n targeted police
effort in areas with a history of anti-social and violent behaviour and weapons
use;
n restorative justice
conferencing, which can require young offenders to face their victims and
confront the impact and consequences of their actions and complete community
service and other reparations;
n bans to prevent
serious and persistent offenders from entering entertainment precincts
(containing licensed premises) and reducing access to alcohol through strict
enforcement of licensing legislation; and
n ensuring that young
people are dealt with by police as soon as possible following criminal
incidents when they are still fresh in a young person’s mind.
COAG noted that best-practice policing targets areas of
greatest need, is developed in consultation with non law-enforcement agencies
to address the diverse needs of young people, draws on Australian and
international research on best practice, is informed by successful programs and
is adaptable to jurisdictional circumstances.[114]
4.120
The Committee is also keen where possible to support innovative policing
approaches to reduce levels of crime and violence involving young people. In
relation to this, the Committee notes the Australian Government’s support for
crime prevention through the now discontinued National Community Crime
Prevention Program (NCCP) administered by the Attorney-General’s Department.[115]
In the context of a growing evidence-base relating to best practice policing,
the Committee recommends that the Attorney-General’s Department introduce a new
crime prevention program to foster a collaborative approach to crime prevention.
The Committee suggests establishing partnerships between the police and local
communities to enhance community safety and to reduce crime, including violence
involving young people, should be a key feature of the program.
Recommendation 6 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Attorney-General’s Department
introduce a new crime prevention grants scheme requiring partnerships to be
established between the police and the local community to support
collaborative approaches to enhancing community safety and reducing crime at
a local level. |
Tertiary Interventions and Rehabilitation
4.122
While support for a ‘prevention first’ approach is a prominent feature
of evidence to the inquiry, some participants have also emphasised the need for
tertiary interventions directed at assisting young people who have already
experienced violence, including victims of violence and perpetrators of
violence. A number of submissions indicated that demand for victim support
services exceeds supply, identifying a shortage of tertiary services to assist
young victims of violence, including victims of bullying, family violence and
of sexual assault.[116] In response to a question
regarding supports available to reduce the impact of violence on young victims
and to assist victims to build resilience, Professor Mazerolle observed:
What are the supports for young people or anyone who has been
victimised? We have something in Queensland—the Homicide Victims Support
Group—but a lot of victimisation occurs short of homicide, so I think that is a
good question. There is a void in that space.[117]
4.123
Access to tertiary services, including drug and alcohol services, and
mental health services for the rehabilitation of perpetrators of violence was
also considered by some to be in short supply.[118]
In broad terms, the aim of tertiary interventions for young perpetrators of
violence is to reduce the incidence of recidivism and to assist with
reintegration into society. Where possible, evidence suggests that the use of
diversionary measures such as police cautions, warnings and restorative justice
conferencing for young offenders is preferable.[119]
As explained by Youthlaw & Frontyard Youth Services:
Youthlaw ... supports strategies that provide access to
cautions and diversionary programs as positive ways to reduce re-offending and
young people’s contact with the criminal justice system. Research indicates
that diversionary measures, such as cautions, conferencing, and diversion
programs are more effective in reducing re-offending than traditional and more
punitive methods of punishment. Whilst statistics show that, once convicted,
young offenders are more than likely to re-offend.[120]
4.124
Professor Kerry Carrington of the Queensland University of Technology noted
that support for restorative justice conferencing is founded on research which
indicates that:
... punitive, retributive forms of justice stigmatize the
offender and amplify deviance. In contrast to punitive models, restorative
justice models of intervention stigmatize the deed rather than the offender,
emphasize responsibility, negotiation, restoration, compensation, and
reintegration, rather than retribution ...[121]
4.125
Similarly, describing the operation and benefits of restorative justice,
the ACT Government observed:
Restorative justice is a private justice transaction that
takes place in a safe and carefully managed environment. It gives the people
who have been affected by the offence - the victim, offender and their
respective supporters - the opportunity to come together to discuss what
happened, who has been affected, and what can be done to move forward. It is a
voluntary process with the victim and offender able to withdraw their consent
at any time during the process.
There is strong evidence to suggest that the most positive
application of restorative justice is with violent offences. Further to this are
the positive findings around the capacity for restorative justice processes to
reduce post-traumatic stress in victims of crime.[122]
4.126
Despite the potential of restorative justice conferencing to reduce
violent reoffending, Dr Kelly Richards of the AIC referred to research
suggesting that this option is underutilised in some jurisdictions.
Specifically Dr Richards noted:
There was a lot of setting up of programs and a lot was
invested in those programs, but in New South Wales in particular and also in Queensland—two
enormous jurisdictions with lots of young people going through the system—a
very small proportion of young people are given the opportunity to go to youth
justice conferencing.[123]
4.127
Where the nature of violent offending is serious or where there is a
history of repeat offending and diversionary options are not appropriate, then access
to more intensive rehabilitation is required.[124]
Intensive approaches focus on:
n providing intensive
counselling to identify and address underlying factors which increase the risk
of violent behaviour; and
n teaching life skills,
including constructive and alternative strategies to dealing with anger and
developing non-violent conflict resolution skills.
4.128
For example, the Intensive Supervision Program (ISP) available
for young offenders in NSW:
... addresses some of the factors associated with juvenile
re-offending, including substance abuse, financial problems, housing needs,
family conflict and negative peer pressure. Ultimately, ISP seeks to promote
responsible behaviour and decrease antisocial behaviour amongst juvenile
offenders.[125]
4.129
Life Without Barriers described another intensive rehabilitation
intervention for young offenders based on a multi-systemic therapy approach, outlined
as follows:
... a family and community based treatment approach that has
achieved long-term positive outcomes with antisocial youth (aged 10 to 17) by
addressing the multiple determinants of serious antisocial behaviour. Positive
outcomes include reducing offending, increasing school or vocational attendance
and reducing the need for out-of-home placements.[126]
4.130
The Committee also heard evidence about the Be Real About Violence program
(BRAVE), a state funded cognitive behavioural intervention targeted at young
people who have been found guilty by the court of committing a violent offence.
BRAVE aims to explore in an interactive way with young offenders their motivations
for violent behaviour and the benefits of reducing violent behaviour, as well
as to teach strategies to manage anger and provide opportunities to develop and
practice pro-social behaviours.[127] BRAVE, which was set up
in 2005, is being evaluated in 2010.
Committee Comment
4.131
The Committee appreciates that tertiary interventions to assist young
people who have already experienced violence are a critical component of a
holistic approach to reducing youth violence and its impact. As noted earlier
in this Chapter the Committee is encouraged to note that the COAG discussions
between the Australian Government and state/territory governments with regard
to best practice policing include consideration of restorative justice
conferencing for young offenders.
4.132
While law enforcement measures are principally the responsibility of
state and territory governments, the Committee notes through the Attorney-General’s
Department the Australian Government supports a number of initiatives
specifically to address concerns relating to Indigenous involvement with the
juvenile justice system. These initiatives include the development of the National
Indigenous Law and Justice Framework and support for diversionary,
restorative and rehabilitation interventions provided through the Prevention,
Diversion, Rehabilitation and Restorative Justice Program.[128]
4.133
Further, the Committee is aware that the involvement of Indigenous
juveniles and young adults in the criminal justice system is currently the
subject of an inquiry by the House Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Affairs.[129] The Committee looks
forward to seeing the outcomes of the inquiry, in particular recommendations
that relate to best practice examples of programs to support diversion of
Indigenous people from juvenile detention centres and crime, and provide
support for those returning from such centres.
4.134
A common theme raised in the inquiry relates to the limited capacity of
services and programs to meet levels of demand.[130]
While this evidence included reference to a large number of tertiary services
and programs addressing a range of issues affecting victims and perpetrators of
violence, the Committee concludes that insufficient resourcing and inequalities
in the distribution and availability of some services, compromises the
effectiveness of these interventions. The Committee believes that to some
extent these inefficiencies could be addressed through a more strategic and coordinated
approach to reducing youth violence and its impact on young Australians. This
potential for the Australian Government to provide leadership in this domain is
examined in more detail in Chapter 5.