1 / 13

Why is gang-exit important?

Moving Away from Gangs: A Gendered Approach Lisa Bellis, Senior Programmes Manager Nicky Hill, Senior Programmes Manager. Why is gang-exit important?. Young people need options to exit Whole spectrum of interventions Co-ordinated responses reduce risk and harm. What Policy Tells Us.

Download Presentation

Why is gang-exit important?

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. Moving Away from Gangs: A Gendered Approach Lisa Bellis, Senior Programmes ManagerNicky Hill, Senior Programmes Manager

  2. Why is gang-exit important? • Young people need options to exit • Whole spectrum of interventions • Co-ordinated responses reduce risk and harm

  3. What Policy Tells Us Ending Gang and Youth Violence: a Cross-Government Report “For young people deeply entrenched in a gang lifestyle, radical measures may be needed to move them and their families away from the gang environment altogether. In some cases, where there is an immediate threat to life this may need to happen very quickly.”

  4. The Challenges • Limitations of local commissioning • Cross-borough and partnership working • Viable alternatives for young women

  5. The Response: Safe & Secure A transformational support programme that includes housing pathways for those at serious and imminent risk of gang-related violence and who are willing to leave the gang behind Safe and Secure has been built on the good practice of SERVE in Southwark

  6. Cross-borough gang exit programme, working in 16 boroughs • Working with those at serious and imminent risk of gang related harm to relocate to a place of safety and exit gang life for good • Builds on local partnerships and knowledge • Uses a bespoke housing pathway to allow for pan-London resettlement • Incorporates a challenging transformational change programme • Risk assessment, management, joint work and communication are key

  7. The Response: Empower A support programme offering practical and emotional support to reduce risk factors in the lives of young people whilst increasing protective factors A strengths and resilience based framework with staff embedded in local multi-agency teams

  8. 6-stranded programme for young people experiencing sexual violence or exploitation • Young women’s intensive 1:1 support • Specialist advice & case consultation • Young women’s group education programme • Young men’s group education programme • Parents and foster carers workshops • Professionals training and events

  9. A Gendered Response: The needs of young women and girls • Safeguarding young women is the priority • Gender proofed services • Appropriate assessment tools • Child centred advocacy approach • Healthy relationship education to allow young women to make informed choices • Safe spaces with workers who are confident to talk about the issues • Focus on their rights, safety planning, support networks, coping strategies, self worth & exit strategies

  10. A Gendered Response: The needs of young men and boys • Gap in service provision for young men to challenge attitudes • Young women we work with tell us boys need to learn about sexual consent • Avoid victim blaming and focus on healthy relationships • Dangerous to place responsibility on young women – young men are part of the solution • Provide a safe space and support young men to develop the language to have these conversations • Challenge gender stereotypes - explore masculinity • Respond to vulnerability and safeguard young men

  11. Illustrative Case Study

  12. Next Steps • Specialist and gender based services • Development of effective partnerships • Strategic and operational buy in • Shared strategy & vision • Multi-agency approach with clear information & intelligence sharing protocols • Consideration of cross border issues and challenges • A clear local training strategy

  13. Contact us: For further information/referrals, please contact: Email: info@saferlondonfoundation.org Tel: 020 7021 0301 Web: www.saferlondonfoundation.org

More Related