The Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST)
has produced a briefing
paper on early interventions to reduce violent
crime.
Violent crime includes a range of offences, from assault to
murder. It can be any action that intentionally inflicts (or
threatens) physical or psychological damage. Over the past
decade overall crime has decreased, and violent crime is down
by 69% since 1995.
However, homicides and crimes involving knives or sharp
instruments have risen since 2014. This has been reflected in
an increase in hospital admissions for assaults with knives or
sharp instruments. Violent offences are disproportionately
concentrated in metropolitan areas, such as London and cities
in West Yorkshire, Greater Manchester and the West
Midlands.
This POST note outlines types and prevalence of violent crime.
It describes risk factors associated with involvement as a
victim or perpetrator of violent crime. It then presents
evidence on the effectiveness of early interventions to counter
these risk factors and prevent violent crime.
The Home Office has committed funding (through the Early
Intervention Youth Fund and the Youth Endowment Fund) to
support projects that use early interventions to reduce violent
crime. Early interventions include both programmes implemented
in early life to reduce the likelihood of future involvement in
violent crime and those targeted at individuals when they are
first involved in crime.
Evidence from other policy areas, such as education, shows that
early interventions can reduce risk factors (an experience or
trait that increases the likelihood of a negative outcome).
There are multiple individual and environmental factors that
make a person more likely to be involved in violent crime.
Similar risk factors are implicated in being either a victim or
a perpetrator of violent crime and an individual can be both
simultaneously. Individual risk factors include experiencing
child maltreatment or being excluded from school.
Programmes to address these risk factors include mentoring
children/adolescents at risk, working with families to change a
child’s home environment and providing mental health support to
parents and children. Environmental risk factors include
growing up in an area of deprivation or living in a community
with poor relations with the police.
Approaches to environmental risk factors tend to engage
multiple agencies (including police, social services, community
groups and health services) and can include changes to policing
in a local area or interventions delivered in school.
Key Points
- Violent crime includes a range of offences, from assault to
murder, and can be any action that intentionally inflicts (or
threatens) physical or psychological damage. The most common
type of violent crime (making up 41% of cases) is violence
without injury, which includes threats or minor assaults. The
least common type is homicide (less than 1% of cases).
- There are multiple individual and environmental factors
that make a person more likely to be involved in violent crime
(risk factors). Early interventions include programmes
implemented in early life to reduce these risk factors.
- Early interventions can be complex to evaluate because
there are many different types, there are no standard
evaluation measures, there are numerous contributory factors
associated with violent crime, and assessing the long-term
effect of early interventions requires multiple follow-ups over
many years.
- Individual risk factors can include child maltreatment,
school exclusion and poor mental health. No individual factor
causes a person to become a perpetrator/victim of violence. For
example, the NSPCC estimates that 1 in 5 children have
experienced severe maltreatment, yet less than 1% of children
become involved in violent crime. Programmes to address
individual risk factors include mentoring children/adolescents
at risk, working with families to change a child’s home
environment and providing mental health support to parents and
children.
- Environmental factors are those that relate to a geographic
location. Deprivation and poor relations between the community
and the police are associated with increases in violence in a
local area. Approaches to environmental risk factors tend to
engage multiple agencies (including police, social services,
community groups and health services) and can include changes
to policing in a local area or interventions delivered in
school.