Co-creation and participation in youth justice
Peer Power resources to help youth justice services work together with children
Tags are keywords. I put tags on every post to help you find the content you want. Tags may be people (Dominic Raab, say), organisations (The Howard League, PRT), themes (women offenders, homelessness) or specific items (heroin, racial disparity, ROTL). If you’re looking to research a particular issue, they can be invaluable.
Peer Power resources to help youth justice services work together with children
What the evidence base tells us about Engagement and Co-Production with
People with Lived Experience of
Prison and Probation
New co-produced best practice guide and website to support people with lived experience who volunteer (or work) in the social justice sector.
Jason Morris on designing digitally-enabled approaches to support desistance.
Kevin Wong on co-production in needs assessment and sentence planning.
Rob Ferguson guest posts on the value of lived experience when developing digitally enabled interventions for people in prisons and probation.
Jason Morris guest blogs on co-producing desistance material for gay men involved in intimate partner violence.
Jason Morris guest blogs on the process of co-producing digital desistance material.
Finding Rhythms explains the way they work with prisoners to help them create and record original music.
The guide is a practical document and provides a structured and accessible introduction to involving offenders and exoffenders; it
includes examples of good practice, checklists and signposts to further information and support.
However, he is very concerned about the lack of staff engagement in Transforming Rehabilitation. He thinks that probation could be improved but that improvement is most likely to happen via a process of co-production with staff and service users at the heart of it.