The Impact of Fourteen Years of UK Conservative Government Policy on Open Access Youth Work
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Defining ‘Open Access Youth Work’
- Young people’s choice to become involved—their voluntary participation.
- Youth worker interventions, which start from the identities, interests, and concerns of these young people as they would define them.
- Its implementation through inter-personal processes, which, respecting their wider community and cultural contexts, seek to build trusting relationships with them as individuals and with and through their significant peer groups.
- A commitment to tipping balances of power in young people’s favour, both within the open access youth work provision itself and more widely within society.
- A focus on how young people feel as well as what they know and can do.
- As an explicitly educational practice, encouraging and supporting young people to discover their untapped potential and to explore wider current and future possibilities for themselves.
3. ‘Austerity’ and Its Impacts—Immediate and On-Going
3.1. Demolishing (State) Open Access Youth Work
3.2. ‘Gesture’ Funding
4. Government Policies and Initiatives
4.1. The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport’s Youth Review and National Youth Guarantee
… outlining a clear direction for the out-of-school youth agenda (to 2025), including considering the next steps on the Youth Investment Fund and the National Citizens Service programme [30]
‘… level-up opportunity across the country’; ‘develop (young people’s) skills for work and life; and ‘support mental and physical health and wellbeing. (Emphases in the original) [30].
… to create more opportunities across the country, so that every young person has access to a trusted adult … through regular clubs and activities, adventures away from home and opportunities to volunteer. [30] (p. 8)
4.2. ‘Reviewing’ the Statutory Guidance to Local Authorities
… Each service requires at least two full-time equivalent, professionally (university degree level) qualified youth workers located in each secondary school catchment area for access, with a team of at least four youth support workers (level 3) and assistants (level 2), alongside skilled volunteers [36].
‘… make an important contribution to other objectives, such as economic, social and environmental improvements, community cohesion, safer and stronger neighbourhoods, better health and increased educational attainment and employment. [38]
4.3. Youth Volunteering
5. The Role of the Voluntary Youth Sector
Post-COVID Financial Pressures
6. The National Citizens Service
The OnSide Youth Zones
- For those thousands of young people now using a Youth Zone, how effectively is OnSide fulfilling its aspiration of providing ‘dedicated youth worker support’ through worker and young person relationships shaped by young-people-led, process-driven open access youth work approaches? On this, OnSide has offered two albeit indirect and somewhat contradictory responses: the Zones ‘aren’t youth centres as you may know them’ [72], (p. 4); but, in 2021–2022, twenty-three of its workers gained the Level 3 Youth Work Diploma [72], (p. 21). Nonetheless, the question remains: how much space does the zones’ declared activity-focused approach leave for those often on-the-wing, off-the-cut, personally exploratory conversations that are at the heart of youth work practice?
- What priority should funders give to the OnSide approach when this is set alongside the academics’ recommendation to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport’s Youth Review for ‘small-scale, flexible and locally determined’ facilities such as ‘pop-up or modular builds’ [30], (p. 7)—say, a youth café in a local shop or a youth shelter in a local park? This is a question, moreover, with particular relevance for more isolated and often deprived rural locations where young people’s access to and use of such a facility is likely to be highly constrained.
- How impressed might local councillors or officers be by a modest ‘pop-up’ proposal if an OnSide offer of a multi-million pound ‘high quality’, ‘state-of-the-art’ Youth Zone in their city centre is also on the table?
7. The Challenge of Reinstating Open Access Youth Work
7.1. Reconceptualising Youth Work
… make an important contribution to other objectives, such as economic, social and environmental improvements, community cohesion, safer and stronger neighbourhoods, better health and increased educational attainment and employment [38].
7.2. Youth Violence and Crime
7.3. Attending School; Getting a Job
7.4. Mental Health
8. Recruiting Youth Workers
9. Two Questions Remain
‘… (as) youth workers are skilled at engaging young people who are often off the radar of the authorities …(they) are not seen as authority figures; thus, they are able to build trusting relationships with young people that are sustained over many months’ [133]
- At the practice level: How crucial for enabling these opportunities and then for a young person’s positive use of them is the fact that, in these settings, she or he will have chosen to be involved?
- At the policy level: How often is a council under severe financial pressure being diverted from setting up, for example, a small local project that young people can join voluntarily and whose goals and approaches are then open to being shaped by them—when an alternative is to embed their youth workers in projects with very different starting points, because these come with, sometimes substantial, government funding?
10. Future Possibilities?
- Supported by grounded evidence, including from young people themselves, forcefully and unapologetically we continue to make the argument for open access youth work as a distinctive youth-focused practice. This is especially true because of its location outside agencies and programmes that many young people engage with reluctantly or hesitantly and may even view with suspicion. The distinctiveness argument also needs to highlight how the features that define the practice mean that for some young people, including ones unknown to other services, it is an acceptable and indeed attractive route for seeking personal and collective support and development unavailable elsewhere.
- On these grounds alone, it, therefore, seems vital that those of us committed to open access youth work practices organise and campaign for the fullest possible reinstatement of the facilities that across England, under the huge financial pressures of 14 years of Conservative Government, have been progressively eliminated.
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Davies, B. The Impact of Fourteen Years of UK Conservative Government Policy on Open Access Youth Work. Youth 2024, 4, 492-508. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4020034
Davies B. The Impact of Fourteen Years of UK Conservative Government Policy on Open Access Youth Work. Youth. 2024; 4(2):492-508. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4020034
Chicago/Turabian StyleDavies, Bernard. 2024. "The Impact of Fourteen Years of UK Conservative Government Policy on Open Access Youth Work" Youth 4, no. 2: 492-508. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4020034
APA StyleDavies, B. (2024). The Impact of Fourteen Years of UK Conservative Government Policy on Open Access Youth Work. Youth, 4(2), 492-508. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4020034