1 / 16

People with learning disabilities in the criminal justice system

People with learning disabilities in the criminal justice system. Chloë Trew, Policy and Research Assistant Manager Scottish Consortium for Learning Disability. About SCLD. SCLD was set up in 2001, following a recommendation of ‘The same as you?’.

Download Presentation

People with learning disabilities in the criminal justice system

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. People with learning disabilities in the criminal justice system Chloë Trew, Policy and Research Assistant Manager Scottish Consortium for Learning Disability

  2. About SCLD SCLD was set up in 2001, following a recommendation of ‘The same as you?’ ‘The same as you?’ was the Scottish Government’s policy about people with learning disabilities and family carers. ‘The keys to life’ is the new learning disability strategy (as of yesterday!)

  3. Our mission Our mission is to work in partnership with people with learning disabilities of all ages and family carers to challenge discrimination and to develop and share good practice.

  4. Our goal Our goal is an inclusive Scotland where everyone is valued and respected for who they are and what they contribute as equal citizens.

  5. SCLD’s strategic priorities • Promote equality for people with learning disabilities, people on the autism spectrum and their families through influencing and evaluating policy and practice at a national and local level. • Promote policies and practices to enable and empower people with learning disabilities and people on the autism spectrum. • Help to build more inclusive communities by improving access to information and support.

  6. “Do you know what is going to happen when you leave prison?” “I am trying to get out, I don’t know what to do, I want to get a flat or somewhere where it helps learning difficult [sic] people. I need to see a social worker and ask her what route to go. A place for learning difficult people [sic] I think. I could share with someone. I have been at the YMCA. I’d like my own room, kitchen, toilets – a shared sitting room, like I was when I was in the homes and I preferred it. When I get out, I am going to go cruising for a few birds with my pal, all suited and booted…It’s hard to do [other] things like counting, I have not got a clue about paying bills or housework. I’m going to need some kind of help. I’m going to struggle.” Interview evidence from ‘The same as you?’ Evaluation

  7. Background ‘The same as you?’ • Defining the problem(s): Perpetrators with learning disabilities may be being disadvantaged in their interactions with the different elements of the criminal justice system Differences in practice across different areas How accessible and appropriate are criminal justice policies and practice for perpetrators with learning disabilities? Criminal Justice SAY Implementation Sub Group chaired by People First Scotland

  8. Context • ‘The same as you?’ evaluation • ‘The keys to life’ • Commission on Women Offenders • Carloway Report • Changes to the Criminal Justice system more broadly: move away from prison to diversion & alternative disposals • SDS • Health and social care integration

  9. Researchaims To map a ‘normative’ journey of people with learning disabilities through the criminal justice system To compare the experiences of people with learning disabilities with that journey and identify points To identify if and how practices vary across different geographical areas

  10. Methodology Literature review • Key individual interviews • Potential narrowing of focus • Different methodological approaches for different groups of professionals • Building the map and testing it out

  11. Methodology (continued) • Inclusive interviews with people with learning disabilities to find out about their experiences • Analysis and reporting

  12. Limitations • A broader view rather than a more in-depth one • A ‘normative’ journey may be difficult to construct given the many different variables to take into account • People with learning disabilities may struggle to recall, articulate or describe what happened to them at particular points or to identify who individual actors are or their role • How long ago were people involved in the system?

  13. The journey so far.... • Stage 1: Getting into trouble/risky behaviours • Stage 2: Risky behaviours resolved or risky behaviours develop into criminal activity • Stage 3: Police involvement • Stage 4: Police resolve issue or a decision to refer the case to COPFS • Stage 5: COPFS • Stage 6: Trial • Stage 7: Release or sentencing • Stage 8: Serving sentence • Stage 9: Parole and release • Stage 10: Throughcare

  14. Initial thoughts on barriers • Accessibility and appropriateness • Information sharing • Recognition of learning disability by different agencies • Access to appropriate support at all ages • Confusion between learning disability and learning difficulty/literacy and numeracy issues • Co-morbid mental health and learning disability

  15. Questions, comments and feedback Chloë Trew Policy and Research Assistant Manager Scottish Consortium for Learning Disability chloe.t@scld.co.uk 0141 559 5720

More Related