The T2A Pathway initiative, 6 projects led by charities in partnership with statutory services, delivered services to 16-25 year olds across sites in England between 2014-2017.
Authors
Kevin Wong, Rachel Kinsella, Jessica Bamonte, Linda Meadows
Abstract
The T2A Pathway initiative, 6 projects led by charities in partnership with statutory services, delivered services to 16-25 year olds across sites in England between 2014-2017. The projects worked with young adults at the point of arrest, pre-court, in prison and on release. Each project had a specialist focus, such as family engagement, mental health treatment and drug abuse.
The projects worked with 414 young people over three years:
- On average the young adults had four ‘criminogenic needs’ (factors that directly contributed to criminal behaviour);
- Three quarters already had criminal records;
- 30% were young women, most of whom had experienced abuse, rape or domestic violence;
- 15% were of ethnicities other than white British
The report found that the T2A Pathway projects:
- Offered a flexible, intensive, relationship-based intervention to young people with highly complex and urgent needs;
- Were particularly effective from the start where they had multi-agency support and referral arrangements that had been jointly designed;
- Helped to change the culture of statutory partners, successfully embedding a young adult focus into mainstream practice;
- Influenced national policy (such as the House of Commons Justice Select Committee’s inquiry on Young Adult Offenders).
Publication link
https://www.t2a.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/T2A-Final-Process-Report-OCTOBER-2017.pdf
Publication Date:
Friday 20 October 2017
Publisher:
Transitions to Adulthood