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Judges to consider youth discrimination

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Judges should consider whether a young criminal has suffered discrimination as an ethnic minority before deciding their sentence, under a new guideline.

The Sentencing Council for England and Wales says offending may be partly a product of discrimination and “negative experiences of authority”.

It is the first guideline to stress discrimination as a youth crime factor.

Official statistics show that young people from minority backgrounds are over-represented in the justice system.

While national statistics show that ethnic minorities account for approximately 14% of the UK’s population, the Youth Justice Board says a quarter of all young people arrested in the year to March 2016 were from these backgrounds – some 21,900 people.

The overall number of young offenders cautioned or convicted has been declining, but the rate of decrease has been slower for minority offenders.

Underlying factors
In the new guideline – which applies to all offenders aged between 10 and 17 – the council says that any sentence must aim to prevent them from committing another crime, while also taking into account the child’s welfare.

“While the seriousness of the offence will be the starting point, the approach to sentencing should be individualistic and focused on the child or young person,” states the guideline, which comes into force in June.

It stresses that sentencing judges and magistrates should take into account underlying factors, including the over-representation of black and minority ethnic children in the justice system. “The factors contributing to this are complex,” it says. Read more