Sunday, 26 September 2010

OK, Ben. You First, Eh..?

Ben Rogers is an Associate Fellow of the Institute for Public Policy Research and Demos, who has worked as a policy strategist for the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit and Department for Communities and Local Government.

And he’s also an utter fool:
Strengthening civility and neighbourhoods is important, but the police have only a minor role to play. Other things – the way places are designed, traffic is managed and the public realm is maintained; the character of shops and local public services (Ed: I note the character of the public themselves isn’t mentioned…), the provision of activities for young people – are just as important as anything the police can do.
Really? It’s badly designed town centres that cause chippy, chavvy little morons, and not a breeding pair of adult chippy, chavvy morons then? Fancy…
And there is a role for the rest of us. Policing depends on members of the public willing to obey the law, and to intervene when they see things going wrong.
I think anyone who has read the newspapers would be able to see why people don’t, Ben. I guess the news about Gary Newlove never reached the hallowed environs of the DCLG, eh?
There is little doubt that people are increasingly nervous about intervening, and that this is a peculiarly British problem.
Well, no doubt.
One 2006 survey found that whereas 60% of Germans say they would intervene to stop a gang of children vandalising a bus shelter, only 30% of British people say they would do so – the lowest response out of the six European countries surveyed.
Hardly surprising.
It is surprising what little thought has been given to how to strengthen ordinary people's capacity to tackle incivility. One option – one I developed in a paper for the Royal Society of Arts earlier this year – would be to promote a first aid approach to community safety, training people beyond the police to deal with antisocial behaviour.
It’s appropriate that that’s what you call it. Because anyone who tries is likely to need first aid. And that’s if they’re very lucky.

For some, first aid wouldn’t have helped much
I called this the Woolwich model, because Woolwich was the place where the first course in first aid was taught in 1878.

People can be taught how to read a situation so they know when it is appropriate and safe to intervene, and when to call the police. They can be shown how to protect themselves and others from attack. And they can be given mediation and conflict resolution skills.
Are you serious? Mediate and negotiate with scum like this?
The pensioner had boarded the number eight bus at Stacey’s Corner in Pitsea.

As he got on board, the man asked his attacker to move a pushchair, which was blocking an empty seat in front, so he could sit down.

Instead the man refused and began verbally abusing the 92-year-old.

As the victim made his way to another seat, the thug continued to hurl abuse.

But, in a shocking twist only just revealed by police, he got up from his seat, and headbutted the victim.
Lovely
As with first aid, this training should be available to anyone who wants it.
And who’s going to provide it, and quality assure it, Ben?

Are you planning on setting up yet another quango, even as the Coalition try to stamp out the ones we’ve suffered for the last 13 years?
The police will always have a role in dealing with more serious instances of antisocial behaviour.

But if the rest of us had a better sense of how to defuse conflict, then we might see fewer alarmist headlines.
We aren’t going to see ‘fewer alarmist headlines’ until the sort of people who do this for a laugh are given sentences that put the fear of god into them and all the other feral creatures on the streets.

And if ABH on an innocent civilian gets you merely a suspended sentence, then why the hell should anyone risk challenging it, and ending up on the front pages themselves? Or in the morgue?

9 comments:

  1. Associate Fellow of the Institute for Public Policy Research and Demos

    Grrrrrrr - before we go any further and of course, that's as it turned out in the post.

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  2. Their ORCS .
    Beyond redemption.
    What they authorities need to do is stop gabbing and deal with it.

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  3. Nothing to see here26 September 2010 at 16:31

    Can't quite agree here. The police do have a vital part to play: their role is often to hound the member of the public who interferes with the fun of various gangs of youths, and warn such selfish adults that trying to stop the underclass from enjoying itself in terrorising ordinary folk is a good way to experience court.

    It's so much easier to prosecute soft targets as it makes crime figures look good and 'the authorities' can be seen to be dealing with the problem.

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  4. I'm a retired Police Officer (trained the 'old' way). I'd like to take Mr. Rogers on a foot patrol of the Leigh Park Estate, north of Portsmouth.
    Neither of us would emerge alive.
    It really is that bad.

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  5. are you sure he is not advocating an 'everybody spies on everybody else' . The east german model might reduce yob crime.

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  6. "Grrrrrrr - before we go any further..."

    Yup, those two are warnings right there, just like the bright colouration on poisonous snakes and frogs.

    "The police do have a vital part to play: their role is often to hound the member of the public who interferes with the fun of various gangs of youths..."

    The targets system has been the bane of the police farce for many years.

    "I'd like to take Mr. Rogers on a foot patrol of the Leigh Park Estate, north of Portsmouth.
    Neither of us would emerge alive."


    Good grief! It's that bad in Portsmouth? When you think of 'no go' areas, you tend to imagine parts of major metropli - Manchester, Glasgow, etc. But Portsmouth..?

    "are you sure he is not advocating an 'everybody spies on everybody else' . The east german model might reduce yob crime."

    Good point!

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  7. The way to negotiate with scum is to walk up to the biggest one and look like your just about to punch his nose though his face and then say what you have to say.

    It does help if you look like you can punch his nose though his face...

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  8. Anon 23.48
    You forgot to mention, Paulsgrove, Buckland, Portsea, Somerstown and Landport.
    The Portsmouth yobs used to pick on the sailors going back to the Dockyard.
    At first the odds would be 2 yobs onto one sailor, but then more yobs would jump out from round the corner and join in.
    One night the yobs picked on what they thought were a couple of sailors, but they were Special Boat Service, the Navy equivalent of the S.A.S.
    The yobs lost that one badly...

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  9. ”It does help if you look like you can punch his nose though his face...”

    Indeed! Though in which case, why employ police and PCSOs who are smaller and shorter than me?

    ”One night the yobs picked on what they thought were a couple of sailors, but they were Special Boat Service, the Navy equivalent of the S.A.S. ”

    Oh, if only that hadn't been in the days before YouTube!

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