Futureproof » Archive of 'Oct, 2009'

Why shouldn’t young people have their rights defended?

Last week, Jewish Chronicle editor Stephen Pollard wrote a rather dreadful comment piece in The Times lamenting the role of the Children’s Commissioner and suggesting that there wasn’t any need for such a position: “How about a Ginger’s Commissioner, for the rights of us redheads?” he asked. “What about a Wii Commissioner, for those who want access to computer games?”

As I’m sure many others did, I sighed, tutted and wished once again that columnists of his ilk would get out of their trendy Islington townhouses and dig a little deeper before putting pen to paper. So I was glad to see that Sathnam Sanghara composed a fantastic response to the piece; answering the criticisms with a robust defence. His standfirst said it all: “If this column were about puppies being held in indefinite detention with no judicial oversight, my inbox would be full.”

Attacking government quangos and those paid to head them up is easy fodder for op-ed writers, and I’d be lying if I hadn’t ever seen the title of a government agency and thought: ‘my taxes go to pay for that!?!’.

But I struggle to think of a section of society more worthy of a publicly-funded body that stands arms-length from government and calls it to account. Those under 18 are heavily reliant on the state, from the education they receive, the healthcare they need, or the thousands of them who are looked after through fostering, care-homes or social services. Many young people come into contact with the state through getting into trouble with the police, but for every young person under 18 with an ASBO, there are around 200 who are providing substantive care to a parent or sibling*; massively subsidising the nation’s social care bill as part of a workforce that would be illegal if it was recognised. All this, and yet because they haven’t yet turned 18, the state isn’t accountable to any of them. Earlier this year, young people were even banned from entering Parliament.

Perhaps Stephen thinks that young people should get together and form their own lobby group to ensure their views are heard and counted, just like every other sector does. There are, of course, organisations that do this, and I’ve seen some brilliant examples of where this is occurring (tomorrow for example, young people will sit in the House of Commons chamber to discuss some of those issues). But, by the very nature of their age, young people don’t have the financial resource, or the time, or the knowledge of how the system works, to effectively campaign amongst professional policy makers and politicians. They need adult support and funding. Especially if English isn’t their first language, or they’ve had an unstable upbringing, or they are simply too young to engage in a debate with adults.

Stephen picks on a single comment made by the current Children’s Commissioner, Sir Al Aynsley-Green, as demonstration of the pointlessness of the role. Last year, Sir Al was quoted as saying that using stop and search powers to prevent knife crime could antagonise young people, and this was seized on as ridiculous both by a government minister (Tony McNulty) and a raft of pundits who get paid as much as Sir Al does to file their columns. The original quote follows the introduction of new powers that the police were given to stop and search people even if there was no reasonable suspicion that they were carrying a weapon. Sir Al, quite reasonably, said: “There is a balance here. On the one hand for young people to feel safer by having the presence of the police – but on the other hand making sure the new powers don’t create further antagonism by increased stopping and searching.” To my mind, that is exactly what someone paid to stand up for the rights of children should be pointing out: especially when I know teenagers who line their walls with the Stop and Search receipts they’ve received.

Sathnam highlights the work 11 Million (the organisation that the Children’s Commissioner heads) has done defending the rights of children who are detained, without legal representation, because of the action of their parents.

But if I was to highlight another reason we need a Children’s Commissioner, it is the effect Sir Al and his team had on the use of Mosquitoes, the devices that emit a high-pitch audio sound that only younger people are able to hear.  It is appalling that it took the intervention of the Children’s Commissioner to highlight how indiscriminate these devices were before councils and other agencies started considering and regulating their use. Until then, it seemed no-one in authority concerned themselves with the legal, let alone ethical, consequences of using these devices.

Perhaps when red-heads are subjected to audible irritation because their demographic is deemed a nuisance; or gamers are locked away in cells, without access to any medical facilities, because their mums and dads broke the law, then they will deserve a commissioner who makes sure the government is looking out for them. But whilst the UN deems the UK to be the worst place in the developed world for children to grow up in, then we absolutely need someone paid to argue the case for young people.

Like Stephen, I would love to compile a list of government quangos that should be got rid of, and put the Children’s Commissioner on that list. But unlike Stephen, I’d like that to happen because the state recognises and respects the rights that young people have, rather than his approach: simply deny there is a problem in the first place.

* Calculation based on the statistic of 869 ASBOs issued to young people aged 10-17 in England in 2007,  against 175,000 under 18s who are classed as Young Carers by Ofsted’s Supporting Young Carers report.

Image courtesy of FatMandy. Used under licence.

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Back in the room

Apologies for the extended break between this and the previous entry, it wasn’t actually meant to be quite as long as it was. My last post, in early August, was just before I went to Scotland for a few days, and ever since I’ve been back I don’t seem to have got in the swing of updating my blog.

However, many long-running TV programmes have a “summer break”, and I think being away from a blog for a while probably is no bad thing. That’s not to say I haven’t actually written anything in that time, but I’ve never got to the stage where I’ve wanted to publish anything.  Perhaps I’ll go back and you’ll see some ‘catch-up’ posts over the next few weeks.

I haven’t totally been skiving in my time away. As well as trips to Scotland, Wales and France, I’ve been busy at work worrying about the Olympic and Paralympic Games. But I’ve also been working on a new project (which, if truth be told, I actually did back at the start of summer but also seemed to get lost in the lazy days of September).

We Need Young People is an idea I’d been kicking around for a while. Partly it is me trying out some new technical ideas (everything from producing XML feeds to generating automatic Twitter updates). But primarily it is based on my thinking that “there must be a better way to do this.”

At work we regularly get emails sent around saying ‘we’re looking for young people to…’, whether it’s from a TV production company desperate for a teenage mum to appear in a documentary, to cash awards that are available for innovative projects initiated by young people. I’m sure there are countless projects, competitions, requests etc that are floating out there, all hoping to reach young people.

Email is obviously quite effective, but it’s not desperately efficient and also by only telling people you already know about projects, only the same young people hear about the same projects.

Surely, if someone could pull all this information together, and present it in a way that it could be divided up so the signal-to-noise ratio wasn’t quite so high, then it could become a really useful tool. Particularly if the data wasn’t just available on a single website, but able to be placed wherever young people, and their adult supporters, were likely to be looking.

So that’s essentially what I’ve built.  Add your project etc (or one that you’ve found) by completing a simple form, wait for it to be moderated, and then watch as it is released for the rest of the world to consumer as they see fit. Or, take the data and build something clever with it; on your website, on Facebook or whatever you feel is most appropriate.

It’s early days, and I’m realising that like most great projects there needs to be a critical mass of data in the system before it becomes useful, but hopefully if people can see the benefit they’ll spend a bit of time adding their content.

Let me know what you think, it is very much a work in progress so it’ll develop over time and all feedback is useful.

And, I promise, it won’t be a couple of months before my next post.

Photo courtesy of Bob AuBuchon. Used under licence.

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