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No One Knows: offenders with learning difficulties and learning disabilities
Author(s) -
Talbot Jenny,
Riley Chris
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
british journal of learning disabilities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.633
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 1468-3156
pISSN - 1354-4187
DOI - 10.1111/j.1468-3156.2007.00456.x
Subject(s) - learning disability , nobody , prison , officer , criminal justice , psychology , criminology , government (linguistics) , economic justice , public relations , law , political science , computer security , psychiatry , computer science , linguistics , philosophy
Accessible summary• Nobody knows how many people with learning difficulties get into trouble with the police. • This article is about a project called No One Knows . It is finding out what happens when people with learning difficulties get into trouble with the police. • Sometimes when people with learning difficulties get into trouble with the police they have to go to court. Sometimes they are sent to prison or have to visit a probation officer. Young people with a learning difficulty might have to go to a youth offending team. • Some people with learning difficulties find it hard to understand what is happening. This can be upsetting. • When people talk about the police, courts, prison, probation and youth offending they call it the criminal justice system. People who work in the criminal justice system do not always know how to support people with a learning difficulty. We want to know what people with a learning difficulty think about this. We want to know what people who work in the criminal justice system think as well. • At the end of the project we will write a report about what people have told us. The report will tell the government what they should do to make things better for people with learning difficulties when they get into trouble with the police.Summary The prevalence of offenders with learning difficulties and learning disabilities is not agreed upon. What is clear, however, is that, regardless of actual numbers, many offenders have learning difficulties that reduce their ability to cope within the criminal justice system, for example, not understanding fully what is happening to them in court or being unable to access various aspects of the prison regime, including some offending behaviour programmes. Offenders with learning difficulties are not routinely identified and, as a result, often do not receive the support they need. No One Knows is a UK wide programme led by the Prison Reform Trust that aims to effect change by exploring and publicizing the experiences of people with learning difficulties who come into contact with the criminal justice system. The article highlights the aims of No One Knows and describes what, for the purpose of the programme, we mean by ‘learning difficulties and learning disabilities’. Problems in identifying precise numbers of offenders with learning difficulties and learning disabilities are discussed and attention drawn to recent research on prevalence. The context and some of the challenges of ‘prison life’ are identified and a number of early research findings from No One Knows are presented.