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Black boys develop Father Hunger - key factor in black crime
 Moderated by: Saida.M, safetyblitz, Raven, Miss Brighter Days, LadyDay, Kunjufu, Kibibi, Happiness, Dillinger, Breadfruit, Backatya  

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milesdavis
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 Posted: Friday June 15th, 2007 11:15

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Broken families 'fuelling black crime'

Black boys in lone parent families develop a "father hunger" that can tip them into crime, MPs say today.

Six in 10 black Caribbean youngsters live in single parent households, invariably with their mothers, and this is three times the proportion in the white population.

The absence of a male role model is seen as a key factor in the "over-representation" of young black men in the criminal justice system................

http://tinyurl.com/yrovp6 (Telegraph)



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RESS
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 Posted: Friday June 15th, 2007 12:10

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This is the result of White Supremacist Racist activity in the Educational, Social and Justice services strategically removing Black men to destroy the family and make money out of filling the children's homes and Prisons to fund the development, promotion and enforcement of White Supremacist ideology and the system if Institutional Racism.



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comfortandjoy
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 Posted: Friday June 15th, 2007 12:12

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It would be interesting to see what the percentage is of black boys who grew up in single parent households, who actually do go on to become criminals.  Then compare that to what percentage of black boys who grow up in two parent households go on to become criminals. 

It's often the case that these kind of stats are presented in such a way as to make it look like it's highly likely or even inevitable that a person growing up in a single parent household will become a criminal.  I'm not sure that is true.  I believe there may well be other strong factors which may predispose someone to crime, other than the number of parents there were in their household. 

In a lot of cases where parents have divorced or split up, the father still has a relationship with the children and sometimes a stronger more committed relationship than one he would have had, had he lived with them.  In other words, absent/part-time parents sometimes make more effort to spend quality time with their children than ones who live in the same house as their kids. 

It's easy to lump all single parents and their offspring in the same category (deadbeat men, careless women, feral, out of control children)  but I think there are many situations where criminality isn't the outcome, and the set-up isn't the stereotypical situation associated with these type of families - also there are many different types of single parents and many different types of children who grow up in this kind of environment.  Not all two parent families are the same and neither are all single parent households so I'm not sure why people seem to always assume they are. 



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Apedemak
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 Posted: Friday June 15th, 2007 14:34

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It would be interesting to see what the percentage is of black boys who grew up in single parent households, who actually do go on to become criminals.  Then compare that to what percentage of black boys who grow up in two parent households go on to become criminals.

True.

Us caribs have parenting problems, what they don't do is question why, the answer is obvious. Not having a dad or having a deadbeat dad gives a kid hells temper, trust me. Bad parenting makes the worst of people.



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SoulRebel
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 Posted: Friday June 15th, 2007 18:53

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Rather than rely on the Torygraph's version of things, you'd be better off reading the actual report. You can find different versions of it here:

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmhaff.htm#reports

This is the introduction.

******************************************************************
Young Black People and the Criminal Justice System
It is important to place young black people's overrepresentation in perspective: in 84.7% of offences in 2004-05 involving young offenders aged 10-17, the young people involved classified their ethnicity as white. In 2003-04, 92% of black young people aged 10-17 were not subject to disposals in the youth justice system.

However, statistics show that young black people are overrepresented at all stages of the criminal justice system. Black people constitute 2.7% of the population aged 10-17, but represent 8.5% of those of that age group arrested in England and Wales. As a group, they are more likely to be stopped and searched by the police, less likely to be given unconditional bail and more likely to be remanded in custody than white young offenders. Young black people and those of 'mixed' ethnicity are likely to receive more punitive sentences than young white people.
 
Data gaps prevent us from building a comprehensive picture of young black people's overrepresentation in the criminal justice system. However, the evidence we received suggests young black people are overrepresented as suspects for certain crimes such as robbery, drugs offences and—in some areas—firearms offences. Young black people are also more likely to be victims of violent crimes. There are variations in the overrepresentation of different groups within the 'black' category, and between females and males. We can say with greater certainty that the patterns of offending vary between different ethnic groups than that the level of offending varies significantly.

Some of our witnesses were concerned that the media distorts perceptions of young black people's involvement in crime. Research commissioned by this Committee contradicted this view, indicating that most members of the public reject stereotyping as regards young black people's involvement in crime.

Social exclusion is a key underlying cause of overrepresentation. Eighty per cent of Black African and Black Caribbean communities live in Neighbourhood Renewal Fund areas. Deprivation directly fuels involvement in some types of offence—such as acquisitive crime—and also has an important impact on educational achievement and the profile of the neighbourhood young people will live in. The level of school exclusions appears to be directly related to educational underachievement and both are linked to involvement in the criminal justice system.

Witnesses also emphasised factors within black communities which help exacerbate disadvantage and fuel involvement in the criminal justice system. They drew attention to a lack of father involvement and to other parenting issues. In the perceived absence of alternative routes to success, some young people also actively choose to emulate negative and violent lifestyles popularised in music and film.

Criminal justice system factors play an important role in promoting overrepresentation. There is some evidence to support allegations of direct or indirect discrimination in policing and the youth justice system. However, the perception as well as the reality of discrimination has an impact. Lack of confidence in the criminal justice system may mean some young black people take the law into their own hands or carry weapons in an attempt to distribute justice and ensure their own personal safety.

A coherent strategy to address the overrepresentation of young black people in the criminal justice system is needed to draw together departments' responses and set challenging goals to reduce overrepresentation. Within this strategy, further action is needed to address the causes of crime among young black people—entrenched poverty, educational underachievement, school exclusions, family conflict and breakdown and lack of positive role models. Some of this support will be aimed at all young black people and some should target specific at-risk groups, such as prison leavers. Finally, further action is needed to address both the realities and perceptions of criminal justice system discrimination and ensure the system meets young black peoples' needs.



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