Why societies must protect children if they want fewer criminals

Sunday marks International Day of Non-Violence. Reducing violence should start with protecting and nurturing children.

30 SEP 2016   /   BY CHANDRÉ GOULD

What drives and sustains high levels of violence in a society? This question has preoccupied researchers and policymakers for decades. A common thread in a great deal of the research is that early childhood experiences play a vital role. Violent beginnings of a child’s life very often lead to violent behaviour in later life.

The question is particularly acute in countries with exceptionally high levels of violence. This is true of South Africa, where the homicide rate of 34 per 100 000 people compares to the homicide rates of Honduras, Colombia and El Salvador, and places the country among the 20 countries globally with the highest rates of homicide.

Research conducted by the Institute for Security Studies between 2010 and 2015 looked closely at the life histories of 20 men in prison. The intention was to improve understanding of recidivism, to inform sentencing policies, enable the early detection of indicators for repeat offending, and inform rehabilitation programmes and interventions.

Reducing crime in SA can only be achieved if the country protects children from violence

The research found that preventing and reducing stubbornly high levels of violence in South Africa can only be achieved if the country focuses on ensuring that children are not exposed to violence or toxic stress at home, and that they are warmly cared for. It is equally important to ensure that children are protected from violence at school.

The men interviewed in the study had been jailed for multiple violent offences. They came from a range of socio-economic backgrounds and different areas in the country. In all cases, their criminal behaviour was clearly linked to multiple adversity from early in their lives.

These men are not blameless: the crimes they committed were cruel and often brutal. But their personal, familial and contextual circumstances had a significant impact on their criminal careers.

They all shared an early and overwhelming sense of loss resulting from feelings of physical and/or emotional separation from parents, carers, professionals and responsible adults. Sometimes this loss was experienced as betrayal. In some cases this betrayal happened by omission, and in others it was deliberate.

Their loss was exacerbated by experiences of neglect; and abuse at the hands of family members and the staff of state agencies and institutions from whom they were entitled to expect care and support, if not love.

Ryan, a white man incarcerated for the brutal murder of his brother, started his life as an unwanted child. His mother explained: ‘I became a mother with him at age 17 years. I did not want him, but my mother forced me to keep him. I was very hard on him; I slapped him around a lot. I never took to him. I did not like him.’

The beatings he experienced at home were repeated at school, where he was bullied daily. His stepfather, the only adult who ever showed him any love and warmth, died when he was 12 – a turning point in his life. From this point, Ryan, who was deeply traumatised by the loss, began a trajectory that resulted in him being jailed; first in a brutal reformatory and later spending more time in prison than out.

Men who lived in urban areas were more likely to follow a trajectory from petty crime

There were plenty of warning signs and professionals who could have responded. The educational psychologist who assessed Ryan after the death of his stepfather could have used it as an opportunity to refer the family for further support. That did not happen.

Zibonele was the son of a farm worker on a racist Free State farm. At the age of two, he was left with an uncle who already had eight children. His life was hard. Like Ryan, he was bullied at school and beaten by his teachers. ‘At school there would be somebody who would like to ill-treat you for the fun of it. It was just like in prison… the older boys wanted to ill-treat me. We ended up fighting horribly. We were later beaten, given seven lashes by a teacher.’

He had an early experience of brutality and injustice at the hands of the criminal justice system. He and his co-workers were also lashed after eating more mealies for lunch than the farmer thought they deserved.

Zibonele would go on to strangle and murder three young girls. No one took any notice of the early signs that he was in trouble. Teachers who could have seen the signs were instead complicit in his abuse.

For most of the men interviewed, their routine use of violence was both necessary for survival and a means to acquire symbols of status. Over time they adopted the hyper-masculine identities that were necessary to secure that status, at least among their peers.

Once they had dropped out of school, they found peer groups who were equally alienated from adults and structures of authority.

Several of the men seemed to have had difficulties learning at school. These possibly stemmed from undiagnosed problems that were left unattended. Dropping out of school signalled an untethering from relationships that could have built resilience and increased opportunities to reverse their destructive trajectories.

Interventions at the family level need to be supported by change at societal level

All of them experienced stress and trauma from early in their lives, and several turned to alcohol and drugs as a form of self-medication. This led not only to more violence, but also to a deepening of their personal crises.

In their adult lives, two factors in particular seem to have had a significant impact on their criminal trajectories. One was where they lived. The men who lived in urban areas were more likely to follow a trajectory from petty crime, such as shoplifting, to more serious and violent property crime.

The other was gun ownership. Having a gun did not necessarily initiate their criminal trajectories. But it did have an effect on the nature and severity of the crimes they committed. Gun ownership signalled an increase in the violence, and the value of their crimes – they were able to rob more effectively with a gun than without.

Interventions at the family and relationship level need to be supported by change at societal level, in particular through addressing working and childcare conditions for parents. Accessible and safe early childhood development centres and after-school care facilities are essential, as is parental leave – for both parents – after the birth of a child.

Parenting programmes have also been shown to reduce stress and improve the relationships between parents and their children. But these need to be pursued alongside other interventions such as improving gun control, and targeted interventions to support individuals and families living in poor, high-violence environments.

The foundations for violence and criminality are laid between 10 and 20 years before the effects are felt by society. In other words, the way the state and a society respond to children who witness and experience violence, neglect and abuse in 2016 will determine whether we will see the same levels of violence in 2026.

Chandré Gould, Senior Research Fellow, Governance, Crime and Justice Division, at ISS Pretoria

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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Chandré Gould

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