A missed opportunity.
Lipscombe, Jo
Young People in Care and Criminal Behaviour Claire Taylor Jessica
Kingsley Publishers 2006 208 pages 19.99 [pounds sterling]
The relationship between being in care and involvement in offending
behaviour is complex and multi-faceted. Many of the factors that are
associated with becoming looked after, such as negative early childhood
experiences or inconsistent parenting, are also associated with the
onset of offending. Furthermore, once taken into care, looked after
children may be influenced by peers also in care, have poor educational
attainment, and be stigmatised and discriminated against by the public,
police, magistrates and others working within the youth justice system,
thus exacerbating any potential involvement in criminal behaviour.
However, much to their credit, many children who are looked after do not
become involved in crime. Drawing on retrospective interviews with 39
young people who had experienced either residential and/or foster care,
Taylor attempts to demonstrate how positive care experiences can
mitigate against offending behaviour, while negative care experiences
may exacerbate a young person's involvement in crime.
Following a brief and rather dated overview of the literature on
the care system and the links with criminal behaviour, Taylor provides a
concise outline of the contradictory policies and political approaches
to children in care and children involved in offending behaviour. She
then discusses the different interpretations of attachment theory in the
context of the care system and within criminology, and begins to draw
together the two theoretical frameworks. These frameworks are used to
create a foundation for the research study, namely the premise that a
secure attachment to one or more adults can promote resilience and
reduce the likelihood that a young person will become involved in
offending behaviour.
The findings of Taylor's research should be, as is claimed on
the cover, essential reading for policy-makers, practitioners and
students in the fields of child care, criminology and social work, as it
is based on a significantly under-researched area. Sadly, the book fails
to live up to expectations. Taylor herself acknowledges that her
methodological approach has a number of flaws: the sampling framework
employed led to a biased sample, both in terms of gender and of care
experience, and there is a lack of quantifiable 'evidence'
(which could perhaps have been extracted from case-file records) that
could have added weight to the conclusions. Alternatively, providing
more detail from the interviews, perhaps presenting a fuller
'story' of each young person, could have clarified the links
between their experiences and their involvement or otherwise in
offending behaviour.
The theoretical argument also falters: while the early chapters are
clearly located within an attachment theory framework, the later
chapters on education and leaving care are not. Indeed, the links
between educational experience, leaving care and offending behaviour are
implied rather than made explicit. Taylor insists that the book should
not be seen as a foster care versus residential care debate, yet this is
often how it appears. Due to the sampling bias, the more negative
aspects of residential care are compared with the positive aspects of
foster care--the beneficial elements of residential care and
disadvantageous aspects of foster care are somewhat overlooked. Taylor
does note the critical issue that foster placements may break down
because the carers and young people become too attached to each other,
but she does not discuss this further; this is a crucial omission if
foster care is to be promoted as a way of developing resilience through
positive attachments.
The above criticisms aside, Taylor has obvious compassion for and
empathy with her research participants and gives detailed insight into
the experience of being in care. Hearing young people's own views
on how becoming looked after influenced their involvement in criminal
behaviour provides powerful messages that should be acted upon by
politicians and policy-makers. Taylor highlights some of the
implications for policy and practice--for example, reducing the turnover
of staff in residential care to enable positive attachments to be made
between staff and young people--and puts forward some suggestions for
achieving change.
The findings of Taylor's research are particularly timely in
light of Every Child Matters and the Green Paper on looked after
children, Care Matters. While there are drawbacks to the study itself,
these should not detract from the importance of Taylor's research
in trying to understand some of the associations between being in care
and becoming involved in offending behaviour.
Jo Lipscombe is an independent criminal justice consultant and
author of Care or Control? Foster care for young people on remand (BAAF,
2006)