Life in care can lead to eightfold rise in falling foul of law - study
The Guardian|September 22, 2023
The largest study of care experience and the youth justice system in England has revealed that children who have lived in care are eight times as likely to have received a youth justice caution or conviction than those who have not.
Daniel Lavelle, Simon Hattenstone
Life in care can lead to eightfold rise in falling foul of law - study

Using data collated by the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) and the Department for Education (DfE), the study monitored the experiences of almost 2.3 million children born in England between 1996 and 1999. Their data was recorded between the ages of 10 - the minimum age of criminal responsibility in England - and 17.

It revealed that 33% of care-experienced children received a youth justice caution or conviction, compared with 4% of those without care experience. This figure was higher for some care-experienced minority ethnic groups including black Caribbean (39%), mixed white and black Caribbean (42%), Travellers of Irish heritage (46%) and Gypsy/ Roma (50%).

The study, led by Dr Katie Hunter, a lecturer in criminology at Manchester Metropolitan University, and supported by Lancaster University, was funded by Administrative Data Research UK. Of the children monitored, 2,241,250 did not have care experience and 50,070 did. Care-experienced people were 2% of the dataset but accounted for 15% of those with youth justice involvement and 32% of those who received a custodial sentence.

この記事は The Guardian の September 22, 2023 版に掲載されています。

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