Scotland's criminal justice system punishes poorer people
and makes it difficult for them to escape poverty, according to an academicstudy by University of Edinburgh researchers. Report author Prof Lesley McAra
said: "Our findings highlight a very destructive dynamic - poverty increases
the risks of violence. Contact with juvenile justice system increases the risks
associated with poverty. As a result, contact with the very agencies meant to
stop offending is inadvertently reproducing the conditions in which violence
can flourish."
It found children from deprived backgrounds were twice as
likely to face police action than better off children who commit the same
crime. Living in poverty also increased the likelihood of violence among both
boys and girls. Poorer young people were also about five times more likely to
be placed on statutory supervision than their better-off counterparts. They
found that a history of being in trouble with the police was the strongest
predictor of whether a young person was not in education, employment or
training by age 18.
Household poverty was identified as an exacerbating factor
that increased the likelihood of young people offending. This was the case even
when a range of other risk factors have been taken into account, the researchers
said. They found that people who lived in extreme poverty were much more likely
to be the victims - and perpetrators - of crime. Girls from poorer backgrounds
were twice as likely as girls from more affluent households to be involved in
violent crime, the authors said. This was the case even after other factors -
such as truancy, substance abuse and poor parental supervision - were taken
into account.
Another study by
Applied Quantitative Methods Network (AQMeN) Research Centre - also based at
the University of Edinburgh's Law School - suggested that victims experiencing
the most crime continued to be within the most deprived communities. Half of
the communities with the highest crime rates were found in the top 20% of areas
with the highest levels of chronic health problems, the report showed. A third
of the communities with the highest rates of crime were in the top 20% of areas
with the highest levels of unemployment.
Lead researcher Prof Susan McVie said: "The findings
are important as they suggest that crime tends to be highly concentrated
amongst poor people and within poor neighbourhoods, and this has not changed
despite crime being at its lowest level for decades.”
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