The Paradox of the ‘Care’ of London’s Children: Discourses of ‘Safety’ and ‘Respect’ in England’s Ministry of Justice Inspection Reports
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Theoretical Perspective
1.2. Incarcerated Young Offenders
2. Material and Methods
3. Findings
3.1. ‘Safety’ Healthy Prison Test
3.1.1. Behavior Management
“The majority of child protection referrals related to allegations of excessive use of force… 46% of young people said that they had felt unsafe at some point at Feltham against the national comparator of 25% and 30% reported in the previous survey. Gang issues were a considerable management task and involved some multiagency work. Good efforts were made to consult young people about the extent and nature of bullying, but it was clear that young people remained reluctant to be completely open about bullying and intimidation… Violence was an ongoing problem and the use of restraint remained high with a number of peaks and troughs. The vast majority of incidents of restraint involved separating young people from fights or assaults…”.
“The approach to behavior management was now overwhelmingly punitive and ineffective. The level of violence, much of which was serious, continued to rise and was very high. Use of force and adjudications had also increased… The number of violent incidents per boy had increased since the last inspection and was now very high. Many were very serious and involved multiple assailants and weapons. Various restricted regimes for perpetrators of violence remained difficult to manage on mainstream units… Behavior management was concentrated on the use of sanctions and regime restrictions with too little incentive to encourage or motivate good behavior… Use of force had increased since the last inspection and was very high. In many cases it was used to restrain and protect boys in fights and assaults…”.
3.1.2. Cellular Exclusion and Restraint
“A small number of boys were too frightened to leave their cells and spent about 23 h a day hiding, locked away behind their doors… At the time of the inspection, the use of segregation in the bleak, unsuitable care and separation unit shared with young adults, was also high and an informal system of ‘basic for violence’ resulted in some boys being only allowed half an hour out of their cell a day… The average amount of time boys had out of their cell had reduced since the last inspection and averaged just 5.5 h on weekdays and 4.35 h at weekends. We found 38% of boys locked in their rooms during the peak working day. CQC colleagues were shocked by how little outside exercise the boys had—30 min a day or less—and the detrimental impact this was likely to have on the health of the adolescent boys…”.
3.2. ‘Respect’ Healthy Prison Test
3.2.1. Cleanliness
“…basic standards of cleanliness require improvement…there had been deterioration in the general state of the cells and the cleanliness of the communal areas, and particularly showers, since the previous inspection…Daily cell checks were carried out and there were incentives to encourage cell cleanliness, which was effective for some, but not all, young people. Efforts were made to eliminate graffiti as soon as possible and there were no offensive displays. Cells were properly equipped but overall, they were shabby…Some cells used for double accommodation for young adults had insufficient screening of toilets and some furniture was damaged…The residential environment had deteriorated. Most cells contained the basics, but overall, the living conditions were austere and spartan. There was little evidence of cells being personalized, or of children taking pride in keeping them clean and tidy. All the shower areas were in a very poor state, often with large areas of peeling paint on the ceilings and discolored wall panels…”.
3.2.2. Relationships
“…Some good work had been done at HMYOI (Her Majesties Young Offenders Institution) Feltham with some aspects of diversity, but the management of equality and diversity had recently lost focus and work with foreign nationals had deteriorated…There were efficient daily briefings to monitor young people convicted of arson but not those convicted of racist and other hate crime… only 59% of young people said that most staff treated them respectfully. We saw mainly positive interactions, with a small number of exceptions… black and minority ethnic young people reported much more negatively than white young people across a range of areas. In particular, only 53% said that staff treated them with respect, compared to 93% of white young people…more staff than boys were using the discrimination incident report form process to challenge racist behavior. Investigations, especially against staff, were sometimes inadequate and dismissive…”.
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Feltham A N-664 prisoners | 11–22 January 2010 |
Feltham A N = 229 | 18–22 July 2011 |
Feltham A N = 181 | 21–25 January 2013 |
Feltham A N = 180 | 11–15 August 2014 |
Feltham A N = 180 | 27 July–2 August 2015 |
Feltham A N = 126 | 23 January–3 February 2017 |
Feltham A N =140 | 21 December–12 January 2018 |
Feltham A N = 148 | 14–24 January 2019 |
Feltham A N = 106 | 4–19 July 2019 |
Feltham A N = 63 | 9–17 February 2021 |
Feltham A N = 75 | 21 February–4 March 2022 |
1 | https://hmiprisons.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmipris_reports/hmyoi-feltham-a-4/ (accessed on 30 July 2024). |
2 | https://hmiprisons.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/our-reports/ (accessed on 30 July 2024). |
3 | How we inspect—HM Inspectorate of Prisons (justiceinspectorates.gov.uk): (accessed on 22 July 2024). |
4 | https://www.unicef.org.uk/what-we-do/un-convention-child-rights/ (accessed on 22 July 2024). |
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Holligan, C.; Mclean, R. The Paradox of the ‘Care’ of London’s Children: Discourses of ‘Safety’ and ‘Respect’ in England’s Ministry of Justice Inspection Reports. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 521. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13100521
Holligan C, Mclean R. The Paradox of the ‘Care’ of London’s Children: Discourses of ‘Safety’ and ‘Respect’ in England’s Ministry of Justice Inspection Reports. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(10):521. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13100521
Chicago/Turabian StyleHolligan, Christopher, and Robert Mclean. 2024. "The Paradox of the ‘Care’ of London’s Children: Discourses of ‘Safety’ and ‘Respect’ in England’s Ministry of Justice Inspection Reports" Social Sciences 13, no. 10: 521. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13100521
APA StyleHolligan, C., & Mclean, R. (2024). The Paradox of the ‘Care’ of London’s Children: Discourses of ‘Safety’ and ‘Respect’ in England’s Ministry of Justice Inspection Reports. Social Sciences, 13(10), 521. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13100521