Crime cannot be viewed as a social problem in isolation from deeper social and economic issues. Understanding and responding to offending behaviour is a complex issue. There is no one ‘cause’ and no single solution; consequently one-dimensional approaches are unlikely to produce results. Currently, the Irish criminal justice system is spending increasing and wasteful amounts of scarce resources with poor results in reducing crime, when modest investments in under-resourced communities would have greater positive effects in reducing offending, as well as producing wider social benefits.
To this end, IPRT is campaigning for a shift in justice resources to prevention and early intervention, in other words: "Shifting Focus: from Criminal Justice to Social Justice."
The case for this shift is strong: as the exhaustive work of bodies like the Washington State Institute for Public Policy shows, there are endless benefits to be gained from taking more constructive approaches to both adult and youth offending. A focus on the underlying difficulties – mental health, addiction, educational disadvantage, poverty – is demonstrably more likely to be effective in addressing the dreadful human cost of crime.
Moreover, against the backdrop of enormous, increasing and endless expenditure on prisons and the criminal justice system as a whole, the case for shifting even a proportion of these resources to a social justice model is undeniable – especially when coupled with the ineffectiveness of the current approach. As research has shown, when specific programmes reduce offending, as well as lessening the social harm of crime, they also save money for the State.
We have been gathering the proof that prevention and early intervention works here.
See also our Shifting Focus campaign section.
16th September 2008
In the UK, senior Labour and Conservative politicians have united to call for more support for early intervention schemes in the community in this new report.
6th March 2008
In this article, leading charity Barnardos calls for preventative strategies designed to deal with youth crime.
3rd March 2008
The article outlines how leading charity Barnados describe the importance of early intervention measures as opposed to punishment.
4th December 2003
Budget cuts to the probation, prison education services and youth programmes reveal the Government's "deep indifference" to tackling the causes of crime, a juvenile justice group said last night.
30th April 1996
Tackling youth crime is now an imperative, according to a review by David Farrington of the Institute of Criminology, Cambridge. (Published by the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust.)
Respect for rights in the penal system with prison as a last resort.