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Victim Support Scotland Background info. Lead voluntary organisation in Scotland dealing with victims of crime since 1985Independent of government and other agenciesVictims of crime in Scotland receive the best support servicesEuropean Union Crime and Safety Survey 2005. Victim Support Scotlan
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1. Youth Justice Alan McCloskey
Area Director Central
Victim Support Scotland
2. Victim Support ScotlandBackground info Lead voluntary organisation in Scotland dealing with victims of crime since 1985
Independent of government and other agencies
Victims of crime in Scotland receive the best support services
European Union Crime and Safety Survey 2005
3. Victim Support Scotland2007 / 08 statistics 100,000 victims of crime assisted in communities
81,000 people assisted in court
1000 victims of youth crime offered shuttle mediation
4. Issues for victims Mediation / Restorative Justice processes still relatively new concept in Scotland
Not available across Scotland very patchy and gaps in services
Youth Justice Services - readily available
Criminal Justice System - offered as diversion from prosecution in a few areas only
Public awareness low
Difficult to grasp concept
Thought of meeting offender again can be scary
Uncertain of whose needs are being met offender or victim
5. Priorities for VSS Victims interests must be at core
Offender needs secondary
Participation of victims in RJ process voluntary / optional
Not at request of offender based organisation
Victims need choice of models
Need access to information and support
Need time
6. Young victims of crime The majority of incidents against 10-15 year olds take place in school
95% of children claim to have suffered some kind of victimisation
In Scotland, young people aged 16 to 24 (both male and female) are most likely to become victims of personal crime
16% of 16-24 year old males and 8% of females in the same age group have been victims of assault
Young people are also at a high risk of being repeat victims of violent crimes, with 19% experiencing five or more incidents in one year
7. Link between victimisation & offending among young people If a young person is the victim of a violent crime, there is a risk that the person will go on to become an offender him/herself
Being a victim of crime at the age of 12 is one of the most prevailing indicators that a child will offend at 15. Likewise, offending at age 12 brings a strong possibility of victimisation at 15
If a young victim of crime is provided with appropriate support and good role models, it is possible to break the link between victimisation and offending
8. VSS VOYCE ServiceShuttle mediation Victims of Youth Crime (VOYCE) Service in Dundee
Benefits of service
Victim centred approach
Offers victims access to information and support
Opportunity to express impact of crime (Shuttle mediation) to young person responsible (U16s)
Victims can choose to access any, or all parts of service
9. VOYCE ServiceOther benefits Service promotes victim awareness
Enables case workers to focus on specific victim issues
Multi-agency approach
Police, Local Authority Social Work, SCRA and other offender-based agencies
Partners aware of victims issues
Victims who want direct mediation can access
Helps young people consider offender behaviour
10. 1091 referrals
Main crime categories
Assault (23%)
Vandalism (20%)
Breach of peace (15%)
Age groups affected
30-44 (32%)
0-15 (25%)
4559 (20%)
Assault = 73% of all referrals for U16s
Shuttle cases
Local Authority (68%)
Individuals (27%)
VOYCE 2007 / 08 statistics
11. VOYCE user feedback Victims feel have a voice
Can get answers to why?
Internal and external evaluation
High satisfaction rate
>90% found service helpful / very helpful
12. The future? Youth Justice Framework: Preventing Offending by Young People A framework for action
Multi agency approach aimed at ensuring Child-centered approach to
Prevention
Early and effective intervention
Managing high risk
Victims and community confidence
Planning and performance improvement