Shamik Das writes on the final report of the Riots, Communities and Victims Panel set up to examine the causes of last summer’s London and UK-wide riots.
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The final report of the Riots, Communities and Victims Panel into last summer’s London and UK-wide riots has identified 500,000 “forgotten families” who “aren’t getting the support they need”.
The report, due to be unveiled tomorrow, cites four underlying causes, namely poor parenting, an inability to prevent re-offending, too great an emphasis on materialism, and a lack of faith in the police.
Looking ahead, the report says:
Government and local public services should develop a strategy incorporating the principles of the Troubled Families Programme to help 500,000 “forgotten families” turn their lives around.
It also recommends schools which fail to raise literacy rates to the required minimum standard for each age group should face a financial penalty, saying up to 15,000 people were thought to have taken part in the riots, the majority aged under 24 – and with poor academic records.
At the weekend, panel chair Darra Singh told the Observer:
“The August riots shocked the world. Up to 15,000 individuals actively participated, with countless more bystanders watching from the sidelines. Five thousand related crimes have been recorded, five people died and the cost of the riots is estimated to be £0.5bn.
“The impact on many people in the worst-affected communities is still being felt, as small businesses try to recover.
“The majority of rioters were 24 or under. Most had poor academic records. Nine out of 10 were known to the police and a third had already been in prison. The independent Riots Communities and Victims Panel, which was set up to report on the causes of the riots, has found that 70% of suspected rioters came from the 30% most deprived areas in the country.
“Communities also told us that some rioter behaviour could ultimately be ascribed to poor parenting, and that shared values in young people should be promoted.”
A 1,200-person IPSOS Mori survey by the panel revealed:
• 67% of people in the deprived areas believe materialism among young people is a problem;
• 77% feel there is too much branding and advertising aimed at young people;
• 85% feel advertising puts pressure on young people to possess the latest products;
• 70% feel steps need to be taken to reduce the amount of advertising aimed at young people.
• Anger with police sparked the riots 4 Dec 2011
• IDS jumped the gun: Gangs had nothing to do with the riots 10 Nov 2011
• Coalition split on riots sentencing 10 Oct 2011
• How to build a cross-party consensus on responding to the riots 16 Aug 2011
• A crowd psychology analysis of the riots 9 Aug 2011
As Singh concluded:
“Action must be taken to avoid leaders having to ask why people rioted again in the not too distant future.”
We will have more analysis of the report into last summer’s riots later this week on Left Foot Forward.
60 Responses to “UK riots: The “500,000 forgotten families””
Anonymous
Oh yes, punish poorly funded schools, and ensure that they have a financial reason to refuse to take disabled students (including dyslexic ones).
unitonehifi
The “500,000 forgotten families”
http://t.co/5p9M8h43
#ukriots #ukuprising
Anonymous
Ah yes. The Beveridge approach
Anonymous
Rot. The views held by many on the left before WW2 vanished in the fire of that conflict, when the common man in Britain proved to the left leaning elites that he was no inferior species. (The right elite, like you, of course still hold that belief).
The welfare state Beveridge instituted was in complete contradiction to his statements of the 1900-1910 period. It was a much later and much changed period.
There is no “origional sin”, and inability to change as you hold out. The poor don’t need punishing for the sin of existing.
Selohesra
They don’t need punishing for existing but they do if they riot. Wanton destruction of their own neighbourhoods is also pretty stupid.