The
2nd Adullam Homes Annual Lecture, 22 September 1995
"Children,
Crime & Community"
Bob
Holman

Introduction
Juvenile
crime, and its apparent increase, has caught the concern of every generation.
During the last world war, the number of youngsters found guilty of breaking
the law rose by a third between 1939-41. As always, the increase was blamed
on the breakdown of family life with fathers often away in the forces and
many children evacuated. I must here confess that, as an evacuee, I had
to leave a billet because of my stealing. The perception of rising crime
and falling parental standards continues to this day.
Whether
juvenile crime is rising or falling is debatable but it certainly involves
several thousands of youngsters. The crimes can have traumatic effects on
their victims. Further, crime spoils the offenders. I think of some previous
lively club member boys who are now in and out of prison. Their lives are
wasted.
At
this point. I must be open about my Christian position. I believe that all
people are created by and are of equal value to God. It follows that we
who acknowledge God as our Lord have a duty to protect all people from criminals.
Yet even criminals are God's beings. Jesus Christ was crucified between
two bandits and, in his agony, still had time to listen to them. I reckon
that Christians must have a concern for those considered most unworthy by
society. I am thus happy to be associated with Adullam because it acknowledges
that the homeless. the single parent, those with HIV and AIDS are as valuable
to God as we are. Of course, followers of other religions - and of none
- can argue a similar concern. Whatever our faith. I hope that collectively
we will strive for a reduction of crime and the redemption of actual or
potential criminals.
In
this paper, I will briefly consider some explanations of delinquency and
then
suggest
some local responses.
EXPLANATIONS
OF DELINQUENCY. THE FAMILY
So
what is the cause of delinquency? I do not consider there is a single explanation.
None the less, David Utting concludes from his excellent review of the research,
"The tangled roots of delinquency lie, to a considerable extent, inside
the family." The question then arises, what is adequate parenting?
Parenting
and Delinquency
Psychiatrists
like John Bowlby and psychologists like Mia Kellmer Pringle have long laid
down what constitutes good parenting, namely,
a) the
capacity to convey affection so that children feel loved, secured and respected;
b) the
maintenance of firm, kind and consistent discipline so that children know
what is right and wrong;
c) the
participation in and interest in children' s leisure and educational activities
so that they develop their social and intellectual skills.
The
implication is that children parented in these ways are unlikely to become
delinquents, and vice versa. There is some research evidence to support
these claims from the surveys by criminologists Donald West and David Farrington
in London and Israel
Kolvin in Newcastle.
Simplifying
their conclusions, they do suggest that young offenders tend to come from
families where there has been a lack warm relationships, stimulation, attention,
discipline, example and permanence. The are not arguing that such experiences
inevitably produce delinquents. They do argue
that they produce characteristics - such as difficulties in making personal
relationships, trouble in controlling emotions, lack of educational skills,
a reduced sense of right and wrong - which make them more likely candidates
for the courts.
Yes,
the roots of delinquency often do lie within the family but the way the
family functions and the way children respond to the family also depend
upon factors outside the family. Let's turn to some of them and, in particular,
the influence of social deprivations or, to use the short hand, poverty
.
THE
CRIME OF POVERTY
Poverty
and Parenting
During
the last 16 years the number of those in poverty has multiplied. In 1992-3,
14.1 million people were living below 50% of average income. The next question
is, is there a connection between poverty and crime? Certainly, an
association exists. Utting's review also concluded, "Children whose
families suffer financial and environmental poverty are clearly at greater
risk (of offending) than those whose parents have the income to provide
them with a comfortable, uncrowded home.
Obviously
youths from deprived areas have a greater chance of being involved in peer
groups which contain offenders. But there is more to it than that. Poverty
makes parenting more difficult. In their seminal research in Birmingham,
Wilson and Herbert compared a sample of large poor families with a control
group in better circumstances. As expected, the poor families did contain
far more children convicted of an offence. Less expected, their parents
were found to be full of care for their children and to hold very similar
educational aspirations and values as the more affluent parents. What went
wrong?
It
emerged that the low-income parents did tend to use child rearing practices
which were unhelpful: they were inconsistent in discipline, they participated
less in play and school, the children were allowed on the streets. Jack
Straw would have applied his curfew. Wilson and Herbert explain that the
parents were in such poor material conditions that they could not put their
child care wisdom into operation. In small apartments with paper thin walls,
a premium was placed on keeping the peace and not annoying neighbours: so
often they gave in to children's demands for crisps or sweets just for the
sake of peace: yet at times the parents remained firm - inconsistent discipline.
In
overcrowded rooms in flats with no gardens, it was a relief if children
did play outside and such a release became a habit. The parents could rarely
afford the books, the toys, the outings, the holidays, which stimulate children.
The
children then often fell behind at school and the parents, after early enthusiasm,
stopped attending parents' nights. In turn, the children rejected school
where they we seen as trouble-makers. Sometimes they g into trouble on the
streets where they were picked up by the police. Parents losing control,
teachers deeming the children as problems, police and social work involvement.
Delinquency was afoot.
Some
qualifications must be added. Crime is not restricted to poor people.
After all, Nick Leeson was not exactly short of money. Further, most children
of poor parents do not become habitual delinquent. But there is a link between
poor parents and delinquent children. This link leads those who prefer to
condemn than to understand to complain, "These parents should do better.
My parents were poor but I turned out all right."
But
perhaps we would be the same. Every year, I take children on holidays. One
has involved an eight hour coach trip from Glasgow to Norfolk with 40 excited
youngsters. Initially we leaders keep calm, tactfully sort out arguments,
reason with the naughty ones, produce games, books, crayons.
As the hours go by, our patience wears thin. We start to shout, we threaten,
we
hand out sweets, we tell them to go to sleep. Before long, our ideas of
good practice have been replaced by short-term methods of keeping the peace.
And if I had been a parent in continual poverty, I would probably have done
the same on a long-term basis.
To
sum up: juvenile crime does have some association with poor parents. But
in an affluent society perhaps the greater crime is that so many families
are placed in poverty.
Unemployment
Unemployment
means low incomes, poverty, for many. The prime minister dismisses any connection
between unemployment and crime. Yet a survey by senior probation officers
recorded that 70% of serious offences are committed by those out of work.
The latest Home Office research by Graham and Bowling of 1,000 young people
aged 14-25 indicated that a worrying number of teenage offenders were continuing
in crime: more than a quarter of the men aged 22-25 admitted to property
crime with many being unemployed. Significantly. a government junior minister,
Tom Sackville, has recently conceded that unemployment can breed crime.
Unemployment
is associated with crime for two main reasons.
First,
desperation. An unemployed young father came to confess that he had
nicked my wallet from our flat: to purchase goods for his children he had
borrowed from a loan shark: unable to re-pay, his knees got smashed in:
he stole from me to avoid another beating. As it says in Proverbs 30 9,
"If a man is rich he may think he has no need of God, but if he is
poor he may steal."
Second,
unemployment can lead to a sense of boredom, of futility, which finds
outlets the excitement of confrontations with the police in mini riots,
in stealing cars, in planning break-ins, in drug abuse. It must be said
that the taking of prohibited drugs also means access into a social network
o: other users, of a kind of fellowship. But drugs can also mean pain, ill-health,
death Drugs are also expensive and hence users are frequently pushed into
crime. Two o'clock one morning, I was woken by a dishevelled young man demanding
money for drugs. When I refused he snarled, "I thought you were a Christian."
Christian not I still refused and he tried to persuade me with a meat cleaver,
eventually he left, was arrested in the street, and went to prison.
I
have outlined some of the forces which draw youngsters into or out of a
delinquent career. I have missed out some and, in particular, the influences
of schools. It can be concluded that the part of the family is vital yet
the way the family functions is partly shaped by external factors. Families
and
children are subject to peer groups, social deprivations, public values,
all of which may have an adverse effect.
Yet
even if we could identify all the causative influences, it must be said
that every human spirit is unique. Youngster from the most favoured
backgrounds ma: become criminals. And vice versa. I was delivering our community
paper early in morning when a 20 year old stopped me the bus stop. His father
deserted when h was young, relationships at home have n always been smooth,
his step-father is in long-term unemployment. As a teenager was disruptive
and unco-operative. Prediction techniques would have marked him down for
delinquency. Yet since leaving school he has chased jobs, accepted very
low pay in fast-food shops, sometimes gets me to act as a referee for better
ones so far without success. Despite his disappointments, he has kept out
of trouble. And now he told me he wanted to do something in the community
and could he help in the youth clubs. Thank God for human unpredictability.
RESPONSES
TO DELINQUENCY
How
can and should society respond to juvenile crime? "Lock `em up. Three
strikes and you're out", such are the solutions voiced by the popular
press and even unpopular Home Secretaries. Certainly, there is a place for
custody. Some young people are so violent, so persistently criminal that
their liberty must be removed both in order to protect others and as the
appropriate punishment. But the important question is, how effective is
imprisonment?
In
the first Waiter Moore Lecture, Brendan O'Friel, himself at that time a
prison governor, pointed out that "herding large numbers of prisoners
together, whose common bond is criminal behaviour, is potentially a recipe
for disaster.'' Despite the efforts of hard-working staff, the latest figures
show that, in 1992, 89% of those aged under 17 discharged from custody were
re-convicted of an indictable or serious summary offence within two years.
Sending young people down after a specified number of offences could well
funnel them into a criminal environment from which they might have escaped.
How
much more sensible to place an emphasis on a policy of prevention, of preventing
youngsters entering or continuing in the delinquent road. I see this as
double-fold.
First,
national. If delinquency is associated with social deprivations,
then it will be reduced - as will many other social ills - by government
strategies which alleviate poverty and unemployment. To your relief, I am
not going to talk about large scale government intervention although it
is necessary.
Second,
local, that is prevention and diversion which focuses on individuals
and groups at the local level. The probation service and local authority
Social Services Departments have certain responsibilities in this regard.
Yet lack of resources and a concentration on child abuse cases has meant
that they have been severely handicapped. Without pretending that local
residents can ever replace the professionals, I wish to argue that they
- members of churches, community associations, ordinary people - can contribute
to the prevention of delinquency within their own localities. Therefore
for the rest of this talk I will focus on the community or, to use the term
I prefer, the neighbourhood.
COMMUNITY
AND NEIGHBORHOOD
Community
or neighbourhood action does not have to be stimulated from outside. The
Community Development Foundation estimates that some two and a half million
people participate in neighbourhood groups. These are not the national
voluntary societies with royal patrons, highly paid chief executives and
million pound turnovers. Instead, they consist of locally run
efforts, particularly in deprived areas, with examples being food co-ops,
credit unions, day care centres, youth projects and so on. I believe that
such groups can play a part in preventing some delinquency as I hope to
illustrate from my own involvement in Easterhouse.
Easterhouse
From
1976-86, I was involved in a community project on the Southdown Estate,
Bath. After 10 years, all the posts were in the hands of residents and we
felt nicely redundant. We moved to my wife's native Glasgow. In Easterhouse,
some council flats, long empty and vandalised, were being re-furbished and
sold off very cheaply. We moved in. I was soon told, "We don't like
English people here - but it's better than coming from Edinburgh.'' This
mixture of gruffness and humour was typical and after a while I was accepted,
became involved and helped to form a neighbourhood group called FARE.
Easterhouse
has recently gained much from improvements to its housing, so much so that
Prince Charles brought President Chirac to see what has happened. But housing
regeneration is not sufficient. Poverty remains extensive. Where I live
over 80% of school children receive clothing grants, that is they come from
families with very low incomes. Unemployment is massive. Of 21,900 residents
of working age, only 8,800 are in the equivalent of full-time posts.
Given
these social conditions, it is not surprising that crime is widespread with,
in 1991, Easterhouse having a crime rate well over double that of the Scottish
average.
Despite
these gloomy figures, it must be added that most Easterhouse residents are
ordinary, decent people who care about their families and neighbourhoods.
Many involve themselves in local voluntary efforts of which FARE is one.
FARE
FARE
stands for Family Action in Rogerfield and Easterhouse, Rogerfield being
one of the 15 districts of this enormous housing scheme. Its committee is
elected by residents. Just as Walter Moore was able to identify with the
homeless because of his own experiences, so FARE's committee contains people
who know what it is to be unemployed, on Income Support, surviving as a
single parent. As with hundreds of similar projects it has these characteristics.
It
is local. The committee, the staff, the helpers, tend to live in
the area. Being rooted in the community, it is responsive to local feelings.
1995 saw a number of drug-related deaths in the area and, at the AGM, parents
asked the committee to take action against drug abuse. It responded by obtaining
the salary for a third staff member who started in August. He is a former
rock music professional and is using music as a means of attracting in those
teenagers who now find the youth clubs too wimpish and are on the verge
of the drug scene.
It
is small. FARE has no premises save a tiny office. Most activities
take place in the schools. It has no clerical help, and cannot even afford
a photocopier.
It
is participative. The activities depend upon the involvement of sessional
workers and volunteers who are all local residents. Neighbourhood groups
undertake a bewildering variety of activities. Few make the prevention of
delinquency a specific and sole objective but they do contribute to this
end in the following three ways.
First,
they can strengthen families. Food co-operatives, credit unions, baby
co-ops, day care centres, holidays, provide practical services which relieve
stress on low-income families. Credit unions mean that cheap credit is available
as an alternative to the loan sharks. FARE owns a caravan at the seaside
which can hold 14 for a cost of &10 a week. Holidays become possible.
The nearby St George's & St Peter's Community Association runs a day
care centre for 40 children a day. Noticeably, Jane Gibbons in her research
on prevention, concluded, ''Parents under stress more easily overcome family
problems ... when there are many sources of family support available in
local communities" (1990, p. 162) With stress modified, parents can
more easily give good care to their children.
Second
they can run ordinary youth clubs. FARE organises around 16 youth activities
a week with some 500 attendances. There are lunch-time and evening clubs
in the schools, groups in the cramped office, trips in the minibus to the
sports centre, swimming, skating, bowling.
What
do the clubs do? They are nothing special: table tennis and pool on battered
tables, badminton. darts, music, all with equipment that has to be stored
or taken away at the end. For younger children, there is the enjoyment of
playing with others, for older ones the chance to lounge around, chat and
chat up.
What
has this to do with delinquency? Some offenders attribute their waywardness
to boredom, of having to hang about the streets with nothing to do. At least
the junior youth clubs get some members into the habit of attending organised
activities. Senior youth clubs with their discos and sports activities can
provide some enjoyable and legal outlets. By attending ordinary youth clubs,
members are not marked out as delinquents - the clubs are open to the neighbourhood.
Yet they do also draw in some actual or potential offenders who thereby
mix with peers who are not delinquents.
The
advantage of ordinary youth clubs and holidays is that they do not have
to be run by professionals. They do require participants who possess certain
attributes such as emotional stability, some skills with young people, a
capacity to work with others and endurance. My experience is that such qualities
can be found amongst ordinary citizens, church members, neighbours, parents.
Resourceful
Friends
The
clubs also bring youngsters into contact with adults whom, over time, they
can learn to trust. A few needy youngsters then relate to the adults in
what I call resourceful friendship.
I
met Brian when he was nine, being brought up, with several siblings, by
his lone mum. He came to our clubs and to several camps. Even at this young
age, he had difficulties, could be very aggressive, and with his mum's approval,
I gave him a good deal of time. I drew him into small groups where I taught
him table tennis and other sports at which he showed some talent.
At
secondary school he was extremely difficult to control, was suspended several
times then expelled. It was nearly a year before another school would take
him but within a few months his truancy and bad temper caused him to be
kicked out again. My aim became just to keep him out of custody and off
drugs until he was 16. We succeeded -just. Now he is 18, unemployed, has
an older brother who is a heroin addict, and is on the verge of crime.
This
kind of personal interaction between an adult and a youngster is not clinical
therapy. Yet it is more than just friendship which is usually a benevolent
relationship between people in the same age range. It is a deliberately
cultivated relationship, with the older person bringing concern, stability,
integrity and certain skills to help the younger. Of course, the older person
may gain satisfaction but the primary aim is less mutual benefit and more
a concentration on the needs of the younger.
Living
locally provides resourceful friends with one major advantage. They are
available. Crises tend to occur In the evenings, at weekends, on bank holidays,
when statutory help is hard to obtain. Of course, being available is not
always convenient. One Sunday afternoon, I settled down to watch Rangers
v Celtic on TV. The buzzer to our flat went and for once I told the boy
to go away. A few minutes later, it went again. A neighbour shouted, "Mrs
Brown is having her contractions, can you take her to maternity?" Reluctantly,
I heaved the woman into the minibus. What annoyed me was that her husband
refused to accompany her as he preferred to watch the game. When I got home,
a boy's mother was waiting. After a family row, her son had declared he
was going for good. It was the boy who had been to my door. Guilt. 'We searched
but could not find him. The police were called. 10 pm he buzzed again and
I was able to speak with him and get him home. I think it is essential that
parents who feel they cannot cope, youngsters who have had enough, can turn
to someone whom they know and who is close by.
To
sum up: neighbourhood groups are not the answer to juvenile delinquency
but by strengthening families, by running, youth clubs, and by developing
resourceful friendships, they have an important part to play in the areas
where crime tends to be highest.
A NEIGHBORHOOD
STRATEGY
I
will end with a case example and a brief suggestion for a neighbourhood
strategy. I met Wayne 19 years ago when I worked in Southdown. In his teens
he was a chronic delinquent making several appearances in juvenile court
for shop-lifting, housebreaking. stealing. Living close to him, I offered
him friendship within the framework of the project. I said he could call
at any time. He took me at my word and called five times on one Christmas
Day. I accompanied him to court and persuaded magistrates not to put him
into custody. We gave him responsibility within our Junior clubs and then,
when he was truanting and disruptive in his final year at school, co-operated
with the teachers to give him work experience whereby he worked three days
a week for the project on condition that he attended school on the other
days. It worked.
But
what is he like all these years later? Last year, I travelled south to visit
him. I was met by him, now in his thirties, at the station and he drove
me to tea at the Hilton Hotel. He is the manager of a group of shops, a
houseowner, no trouble with the police. Why?
Wayne
thanks the project. Certainly the many clubs he attended did play a part
by filling up some of his leisure time. Probably our friendship did keep
him out of custody at a crucial time and if he had been sent away he would
have missed that job opportunity and he says he would have entered on a
criminal career.
Perhaps
more important was the fact that he obtained a satisfying job. The boss
of a glaziers firm spotted his financial abilities and he was given managerial
responsibilities. What was the point of nicking after that? Next, he was
able to afford marriage and family.
The
key elements in helping Wayne were the youth services and employment. In
1996 youth amenities and jobs are less available. I therefore argue that
neighbourhood groups could play a key role in delinquency prevention in
these two spheres. But these groups are chronically lacking in resources.
In Scotland alone, over 1000 jobs have been lost in the voluntary sector
in the last year.
Jack
Straw, the shadow home secretary, in the manifesto, Tackling Youth Crime.
praises community involvement and calls for partnerships between local groups
and local authorities. But he puts forward no strategy for financing local
action. So let me make a proposal.
The
next government should set up a National Neighbourhood Fund which
will distribute resources to about 250 boards elected from the most socially
deprived areas. These boards should then make grants to locally controlled
groups for two particular purposes.
One,
to extend youth work. It is worth mentioning that a survey in Easterhouse
found over 80% of residents saying that the area's greatest priority was
youth amenities. Extensive youth provision would give younger teenagers
an alternative to delinquency and, as described, lay the foundations for
later relationships with "resourceful friends".
Second,
to create full time jobs, not just in youth work but also in credit
unions, food, co-ops, day care centres and so on. Jobs with a purpose for
young people would break the futility that leads to drug abuse, would attack
the boredom and hopelessness that can lead to crime. Easterhouse has several
hundred well-paid jobs - to social workers, welfare and medical staff. But
most do not live in the area so the money is spent elsewhere. Jobs for local
people would mean salaries spent in deprived areas which, in turn, would
boost the local economy and so improve the quality of life for all.
£2
million pounds a year for each board would total &500 million in all.
This is not a large amount and I believe it should come from central taxation.
No doubt politicians will say the country cannot afford it although oddly
it can afford increases in MP's salaries, can afford a £6.9 billion sweetener
for the privatisation of the nuclear industry. So I come up with another
suggestion. The centrally appointed lottery quangos should be replaced by
the 250 elected boards who would distribute lottery money to the same ends.
This
would enhance democracy, participation and re-distribution, These are values
and practices which would specifically lead to less delinquency and would
generally lead to a more just and, dare I say it, a more Christian society.
REFERENCES
J.
Bowlby, Child Care and the Growth of Love, Pelican, 1953
M.
Cockett & J. Tripp, The Exeter Family Study, Exeter University Press,
1994
N.
Dennis & G. Erdos, Families without Fatherhood, IEA, 1993
J.
Gibbons, et.al., Family Support and Prevention, HMSO, 1990
J.
Graham & B. Bowling, Young People and Crime, Home Office, 1995
B.
Holman, A New Deal for Social Welfare, Lion Publishing, 1993
B.
Holman, The Evacuation. A Very British Revolution, Lion Publishing, 1995
I.
Kolvin, et.al., Continuities of Deprivation, Avebury, 1991
C.
Murray, The Emerging British Underclass, IEA, 1990
C.
Petrie, The Nowhere Boys, Saxon House, 1980
K.
Pringle, The Needs of Children, Hutchinson, 175
J.
Straw & A. Michael, Tackling Youth Crime, Labour Party, 1996
D.
Utting, et.al., Crime and the Family, Family Policy Studies Centre, 1993
M.
Wadsworth, The Roots of Delinquency, Martin Robertson, 1979
D.
West & D. Farrington, The Delinquent Way of Life, Heinemann, 1977
H.
Wilson & G. Herbert, Parents and Children in the Inner City, Routledge,
1978