
Youth Offending
'Youth crime: Findings From The 1998-1999 Youth Lifestyle Survey' http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs/hors209.pdf)
was published by the Home Office in September 2000 and collected information on many
of these factors.
The report assessed trends in self-reported offending between 1992/93 and 1998/99
among a sub-sample of 14-25 year olds. Overall, it shows no significant change over
the six-year period in the proportion of men or women admitting offending in the last
year. However, there has been an increase in offending among young men, which is mainly
attributable to increases in fighting and criminal damage.
The Youth Lifestyle Survey found that:
men under 21 who drank regularly were more likley to be offenders than the
occasional or non drinker.
men aged 22-30 showed no relationship between regular drinking and offending
overall but those who drank regularly were more likely to be violent offenders than
those who did not
young males (16-24 years) are much more likely to be the perpetrators of alcohol-
related violence than any other group.
15% of 12-17 years olds have been involved in some form of anti-social behaviour
as a result of drinking alcohol
a higher proportion of offenders aged 12-17 years were frequent drinkers 36%
than non-offenders of which 20% were frequent drinkers
young people aged 12-15 years who were disaffected from school, had truanted
or been excluded, were twice as likely to drink frequently although there is no way
of saying which was the cause and which the effect or indeed, if any other
causal factors played a part.
children’s drinking is linked with their parents drinking. The majority of
young people drink at home with their parents. Consequently parents are important
role models in encouraging sensible drinking
the more people drank, the more likely they were to be violent offenders
For females, there was no relationship between drinking and offending over the
age of 15. However, girls aged 12 to 15 who drank regularly were five times more
likely to offend than those who drank less often.
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