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This textbook provides a comprehensive introduction to the theory
and practice of assessment and intervention planning with young
people who offend. It will help equip practitioners with the
knowledge and professional skills central to these critically
important tasks in youth justice. Assessment in Youth Justice
includes learning features such as review questions and case
studies, plus an online resource. It covers varied theoretical and
practical topics, including decision-making, use of standardized
tools, report writing, and improving assessment quality. It also
takes into account current UK policy developments along with a
range of literature on assessment in criminal justice and social
care. Assessment in Youth Justice encourages readers to think
critically about their role in assessment and planning, to engage
with current debates, and to take practical steps to enhance their
own practice.
Alongside the current media public preoccupation with high-risk
offenders, there has been a shift towards a greater focus on risk
and public protection in UK criminal justice policy. Much of the
academic debate has centered on the impact of the risk paradigm on
adult offender management services; less attention has been given
to the arena of youth justice and young adults. Yet, there are
critical questions for both theory - are the principles of risk
management the same when working with young people? - and practice
- how can practitioners respond to those young people who cause
serious harm to others? - that need to be considered. The
distinguished contributors to "Young people and 'risk'" consider
risk not only in terms of public protection but also in terms of
young people's own vulnerability to being harmed (either by others
or through self-inflicted behaviour). One of the report's key
objectives is to explore the links between these two distinct, but
related, aspects of risk. Maggie Blyth is a member of the Parole
Board for England and Wales and independent chair of Nottingham
City Youth Offending Team. She also works independently as a
criminal justice consultant. Kerry Baker is a researcher in the
Centre for Criminology at the University of Oxford and also a
consultant to the Youth Justice Board on issues of assessment, risk
and public protection. Enver Solomon is Deputy Director of the
Centre for Crime and Justice Studies, an independent charity
affiliated to the Law School at King's College London.
This textbook provides a comprehensive introduction to the theory
and practice of assessment and intervention planning with young
people who offend. It will help equip practitioners with the
knowledge and professional skills central to these critically
important tasks in youth justice. Assessment in Youth Justice
includes learning features such as review questions and case
studies, plus an online resource. It covers varied theoretical and
practical topics, including decision-making, use of standardized
tools, report writing, and improving assessment quality. It also
takes into account current UK policy developments along with a
range of literature on assessment in criminal justice and social
care. Assessment in Youth Justice encourages readers to think
critically about their role in assessment and planning, to engage
with current debates, and to take practical steps to enhance their
own practice.
Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements (MAPPA) are now one of
the central features of government policy in the UK for managing
the risk presented by violent and sexual offenders. Although there
has been research and debate concerning the use of MAPPA with adult
offenders, their application to young people has received
relatively little attention until now. Multi-Agency Public
Protection Arrangements & Youth Justice extends the existing
literature on public protection. It provides a detailed exploration
of MAPPA policy and practice in order to prompt further debate
about the implications of the risk paradigm for young people and
youth justice practitioners. In the book, key academics,
practitioners and policy makers consider a range of theoretical and
practical issues raised by the introduction of MAPPA including risk
and children's rights, the use of professional discretion by
practitioners, alternative approaches to risk management and
suggestions for future policy development. It will be of interest
to both professionals and academics working with young offenders
and in youth justice.
Maintaining a balance between managing and assessing risk and
upholding the required high standards of practice in health and
social care can be demanding, particularly in the current climate
of increased preoccupation with the difficult tensions between
rights, protection and risk-taking. Good Practice in Assessing Risk
is a comprehensive guide to good practice for those working with
risk, covering a wide variety of health, social care and criminal
justice settings including child protection, mental health, work
with sex offenders and work with victims of domestic violence. The
contributors discuss a range of key issues relating to risk
including positive risk-taking, collaborating with victims and
practitioners in the design of assessment tools, resilience to
risk, and defensibility. The book also explores the role of
bureaucracy in hindering high quality professional practice,
complex decision-making in situations of stress or potential blame,
and involving service users in assessment. This book reflects the
latest policy and practice within health, social care and criminal
justice and will be an invaluable volume to all professionals
working in these fields.
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