Reduce youth crime by making criminal education part of the Curriculum


Reduce youth crime by making criminal education part of the Curriculum
The Issue
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As a criminal solicitor of 18 years experience, I have represented too many young people (10-17 year olds) in the police station and in Court simply because they did not know or understand the Law. They were not equipped to make better or informed decisions when a situation arose or to see the warning signs when they were being exploited. There are many situations where young people unknowingly or unintentionally commit offences and sometimes commit offences due to peer pressure and not knowing how to avoid certain situations. Youth crime is only increasing, and one of the many factors in that equation is the lack of knowledge and education.
Here are some Youth Statistics published in 2025 for the year 2023-2024 :
1. Just under 8,300 children became first time entrants into the Justice System
2. 35,600 offences committed by children were proven which is a 4% rise and an increase for the 2nd consecutive year.
3. 660 children were sentenced to a custodial sentence which is an increase of 21% and is the first increase of custodial sentences in the last 10 years.
4.The reoffending rate of children committing offences increased for the 2nd consecutive year to 32.5%
My personal opinion is that it is hypocritical of us as a country to punish children for their wrongdoing when they have not been educated to be able to make informed decisions. Of course, I am not talking about prolific young offenders who do know the law and choose to disregard it. I am talking about the first-time offenders. We are basically punishing them for ignorance that we have created. Those that will then disregard that knowledge will then rightly be prosecuted, but we need to give our young people the tools so that they can hopefully make the right decisions and better protect themselves. Another tool, that a legal education would provide our children with is legal thinking/reasoning skills.
I believe there is currently a barrier between our young people and the law which we need to dismantle if we are to see a change, namely a reduction, in youth crime which in turn will likely reduce adult crime. Too often do children involved in crime become further embroiled in the Criminal Justice System (bringing its own issues of obtaining new negative behaviours, addictions and associations). In turn, it places more pressure on our amazing support agencies such as the Youth Offending Team and charities out there, providing all the support and guidance that they can, but being overburdened and underfunded.
An education into basic criminal law will provide our children with knowledge about the law and legal thinking/reasoning skills enabling them to apply it the real life situations that will inevitably arise for every young person as they navigate friendships, peer pressure, sexual curiosities and financial independence to name a few.
The UK Department of Education provides statutory guidance called Keeping Children Safe in Education to ensure Schools/Colleges follow their legal duties to safeguard and promote the welfare of young people. This includes safeguarding and prioritising education to ensure schools contribute to preventing criminal behaviour among young people. By not including compulsory lessons on criminal law within the curriculum, we are failing to do this. We are overlooking a possible resolution (albeit not a remedy); to reduce criminality amongst young people and adults, to make our communities safer, to reduce the pressure on our Criminal Justice System and its supporting Agencies/Charities and reduce the burden/expense on the Legal Aid purse (tax payers money). We are overlooking another way to promote wellbeing in and the safeguarding of our children by providing them with more tools/comprehension to safely and informedly navigate their way to adulthood.
Make your signature count by clicking the official petition below. If you sign via change rather than the petition link, your signature will not count. THANK YOU, sign by clicking this link: https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/712115
68
The Issue
Please SIGN PETITION VIA GOVERNMENT LINK BELOW and not via change.org otherwise your signature will not count towards a Government response.
As a criminal solicitor of 18 years experience, I have represented too many young people (10-17 year olds) in the police station and in Court simply because they did not know or understand the Law. They were not equipped to make better or informed decisions when a situation arose or to see the warning signs when they were being exploited. There are many situations where young people unknowingly or unintentionally commit offences and sometimes commit offences due to peer pressure and not knowing how to avoid certain situations. Youth crime is only increasing, and one of the many factors in that equation is the lack of knowledge and education.
Here are some Youth Statistics published in 2025 for the year 2023-2024 :
1. Just under 8,300 children became first time entrants into the Justice System
2. 35,600 offences committed by children were proven which is a 4% rise and an increase for the 2nd consecutive year.
3. 660 children were sentenced to a custodial sentence which is an increase of 21% and is the first increase of custodial sentences in the last 10 years.
4.The reoffending rate of children committing offences increased for the 2nd consecutive year to 32.5%
My personal opinion is that it is hypocritical of us as a country to punish children for their wrongdoing when they have not been educated to be able to make informed decisions. Of course, I am not talking about prolific young offenders who do know the law and choose to disregard it. I am talking about the first-time offenders. We are basically punishing them for ignorance that we have created. Those that will then disregard that knowledge will then rightly be prosecuted, but we need to give our young people the tools so that they can hopefully make the right decisions and better protect themselves. Another tool, that a legal education would provide our children with is legal thinking/reasoning skills.
I believe there is currently a barrier between our young people and the law which we need to dismantle if we are to see a change, namely a reduction, in youth crime which in turn will likely reduce adult crime. Too often do children involved in crime become further embroiled in the Criminal Justice System (bringing its own issues of obtaining new negative behaviours, addictions and associations). In turn, it places more pressure on our amazing support agencies such as the Youth Offending Team and charities out there, providing all the support and guidance that they can, but being overburdened and underfunded.
An education into basic criminal law will provide our children with knowledge about the law and legal thinking/reasoning skills enabling them to apply it the real life situations that will inevitably arise for every young person as they navigate friendships, peer pressure, sexual curiosities and financial independence to name a few.
The UK Department of Education provides statutory guidance called Keeping Children Safe in Education to ensure Schools/Colleges follow their legal duties to safeguard and promote the welfare of young people. This includes safeguarding and prioritising education to ensure schools contribute to preventing criminal behaviour among young people. By not including compulsory lessons on criminal law within the curriculum, we are failing to do this. We are overlooking a possible resolution (albeit not a remedy); to reduce criminality amongst young people and adults, to make our communities safer, to reduce the pressure on our Criminal Justice System and its supporting Agencies/Charities and reduce the burden/expense on the Legal Aid purse (tax payers money). We are overlooking another way to promote wellbeing in and the safeguarding of our children by providing them with more tools/comprehension to safely and informedly navigate their way to adulthood.
Make your signature count by clicking the official petition below. If you sign via change rather than the petition link, your signature will not count. THANK YOU, sign by clicking this link: https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/712115
68
The Decision Makers
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Petition created on 8 April 2025
