England Launches Youth Hubs and Targeted School Support to Address Knife Crime
In Brief
Authorities are expanding youth services and school interventions as part of efforts to reduce knife crime and support young people.
Key Facts
- Eight new 'young futures' youth hubs will open across England to support people up to age 18.
- A Home Office programme will use mapping technology and crime data to identify up to 250 at-risk schools.
- The youth hubs aim to provide employment advice, health, and wellbeing support, and prevent involvement in crime.
- Specialist training will be provided for school leaders in areas identified as knife crime hotspots.
- The initiatives are part of a government pledge to halve knife crime within a decade.
What Happened
The UK government announced new youth hubs and a targeted school support programme using crime data and mapping technology to address knife crime in England.
Why It Matters
These measures are intended to address growing concerns about knife crime by providing both preventative support for young people and targeted interventions in high-risk areas.
What's Next
Authorities will roll out the youth hubs and begin identifying schools for the targeted programme. The impact of these initiatives will be monitored as part of broader efforts to reduce knife crime.
Sources
- The Guardian — Hubs to help young people away from crime and into work to open in England(23h ago)
- BBC News — Schools in knife crime hotspots to get specialist training(54m ago)
- The Guardian — Hyper-targeted scheme to help at-risk schools in England tackle knife crime(54m ago)
