2013-03-26

Updated: Updated key principles documents published.

Integrated Offender Management (IOM) brings a cross-agency response to the crime and reoffending threats faced by local communities. The most persistent and problematic offenders are identified and managed jointly by partner agencies working together.

IOM helps to improve the quality of life in communities by:

reducing the negative impact of crime and reoffending

reducing the number of people who become victims of crime

helping to improve the public’s confidence in the criminal justice system

IOM key principles

The key principles describe the main features of IOM and guide local arrangements and approaches. Local IOM models will vary to reflect local circumstances and priorities, but the common elements are:

all partners manage offenders together

a local response to local problems

all offenders can potentially be included

offenders face up to their responsibility or face the consequences

best use is made of existing programmes and governance arrangements

achieving long-term desistance from crime

Further detail about each of the key principle headings is provided in the paper ‘Integrated offender management key principles – supplementary information’

National intergrated offender management conference: 2015

The Home Office and the College of Policing will be hosting a two day National Conference on Integrated Offender Management on the 25th and 26th February 2015 in Ryton-on-Dunsmore, near Coventry. The conference will be free to attend.

The conference will open with a keynote address from the Minister of State for Policing, Criminal Justice and Victims, The Rt Hon Mike Penning MP.

The two days will include setting the strategic IOM approach firmly into the new delivery landscape, with the establishment of the National Probation Service and 21 Community Rehabilitation Companies, and what these reforms mean for the IOM key principles. Key themes will include a focus on tackling gangs, youth violence, serious and organised crime as well as addressing concerns around foreign national offenders. The event is aimed at a wide range of partnerships including police, probation, youth justice, the voluntary sector, health and others involved in IOM.

The programme will also include a number of practitioner-led breakout sessions covering a range of relevant themes, which will allow delegates to engage and share examples of effective practice and local innovation.

Register your interest. For further information please contact the IOM team.

IOM and social enterprise

The Home Office, in partnership with Clinks and Social Firms UK has undertaken a short piece of work to explore the role of social enterprises and community interest companies in providing training and employment opportunities for offenders (both adult and young offenders).

The aim was to capture and share some of the current learning and effective practice through the development of a set of effective practice resources. A report of the work, and the 20 case studies have now been published. These materials are intended to provide a resource for local Integrated Offender Management arrangements, other local partners, who might be interested in establishing or using social enterprises to help offenders access training and employment opportunities as a route out of crime.

IOM Efficiency Toolkit (Phase 2)

Local areas can evaluate their IOM arrangements using the following resources:

IOM Efficiency Toolkit Phase 2: Value for Money Tool
IOM Efficiency Toolkit Phase 2: Break Even Analysis Handbook
IOM Efficiency Toolkit Phase 2: Value for Money Tool Self-Help Guide
IOM Efficiency Toolkit Phase 2: Revised Unit Costs of Crime and Multipliers

If you have any problems running the tool, contact:

Offender Strategies Team

Tackling Crime Unit

Home Office

5th Floor Fry Building

2 Marsham Street

London

SW1P 4DF

Email: iom.info@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk

Building Voluntary and Community Sector (VCS) involvement in IOM

Building VCS involvement in the IOM programme funded by the Home Office and managed by Clinks, aimed to build on and strengthen the role of the VCS in local IOM arrangements as an equal partner.

The Home Office and Clinks have also published jointly a series of resources that draw on the learning from this programme. These resources are primarily intended to help key stakeholders involved in local IOM arrangements to review the role of VCS partners, but may equally help VCS organisations to think about the range of roles they could undertake, individually or collectively. Resource 4, in particular, aims to help VCS organisations engage with local IOM arrangements and other CJS structures. An overview of the programme and the final reports can be accessed from the links to the right.

IOM Survey

The IOM Survey Executive Summary presents a summary of findings from a national survey of a broad range of partners engaged in the strategic development and operational delivery of local IOM approaches, incorporating the local Prolific and other Priority Offender (PPO) and the Drug Interventions Programmes (DIP).

IOM conference 2013

The report on the national conference (held 31 October to 1 November 2013) includes the transcript of the video address by Damian Green, the Minister of State for Policing, Criminal Justice and Victims, and summaries from the other keynote speakers at the conference.

The presentations were set in the context of police and crime commissioners, the serious and organised crime strategy and transforming rehabilitation. The conference report highlighted the opportunities and benefits of IOM in targeting new cohorts of offenders, the role of IOM in both supporting local action and preventing serious and organised crime, and its alignment with other significant reforms, such as the troubled families programme.

The 2012 IOM conference presentations and report are also available.

IOM workforce development programme

The Home Office has commissioned the Hallam Centre for Community Justice at Sheffield Hallam University to develop the IOM e-learning programme.

The programme aims to bring together all the current knowledge about emerging practice to help support local areas and develop the skills of key stakeholders at both the strategic and operational level to manage offenders more effectively as part of their local IOM arrangements.

The aims of the IOM workforce development programme are to:

increase IOM awareness at all levels

improve workforces’ IOM-related knowledge and skills

contribute to the development of an agreed vision of IOM locally

embed and communicate that vision to relevant organisations

assist in the effective and efficient management of offenders

The IOM e-learning programme contributes to this by providing learning materials to meet the above aims, allowing local areas to construct curriculums to ensure coverage of all key IOM-related elements and providing an e-learning platform to deliver this. The e-learning platform consists of three main areas: knowledge repository, problem solving and toolkits.

If you are working within a local IOM partnership in either a strategic or operational role, then you may wish to register to join the IOM e-learning programme and access the e-learning platform. You can register for access through the Hallam Centre for Community Justice website or by emailing iom@shu.ac.uk.

Choices

Choices was a £4 million programme funded in 2011-12 by the Home Office targeted at the voluntary and community sector aimed at preventing and reducing substance misuse and related offending by vulnerable young people aged 10 to 19.

The programme was about building on proven approaches but with an emphasis on developing more innovative ways of working, delivering more effective local solutions and adding value to existing local services.

The Home Office funded 11 national voluntary and community organisations to deliver Choices in partnership with around 195 local voluntary and community organisations and engaged over 10,000 young people.

The successful national voluntary organisations who delivered Choices were:

Organisation

Location

Details

The Prince’s Trust

Hackney, Kennington, Bath, Merseyside, Newcastle, Kent and Teesside

Provided intensive support and interventions for 152 vulnerable young people aged 13-19. Provided bespoke training and resources to 24 staff from 8 local voluntary sector organisations to develop their skills and abilities to work with vulnerable young people.

Action for Children

Rotherham

Focused on children of drug misusing parents. Two groups of 10 young people aged 10-13 and 14-16 and provided issues-based sessions and diversionary activity and one-to-one support. Created two e-learning modules to be available to 320 paid staff and 450 volunteers through the Voluntary Sector Consortium’s e-learning platform on substance misuse and offending.

Compass - Services to Tackle Problem Drug Use

Enfield, Harrow, Coventry, Lambeth and Hull

Diverted around 200 young people who were engaged on or were at risk of substance misuse into positive and sustainable diversionary activities. Provided support from a peer mentor and one-to-one interventions tackling self-esteem, offending behaviour and substance misuse.

Catch22

Waltham Forest, Haringey, Hackney, Lambeth, Southwark, Islington and Lewisham

Focused on supporting high harm violent young people (10-19) involved in gangs across London as identified by the Metropolitan Police through Operation Connect. Provided training to local voluntary organisations and statutory partners in drug awareness and local screening tools to ensure they could identify signs of substance misuse and make appropriate referrals to substance misuse agencies.

Barnardos

Bradford

Established a multi-agency panel in order to identify and monitor the progress of two key cohorts (10 young people and their families) that were on ‘the edge’ of statutory intervention in relation to substance misuse and related offending behaviours.

Active Communities Network

London, Manchester, Liverpool, Bristol, Sheffield, Nottingham, Brighton, Southend, Birmingham, Hull, Portsmouth, Southampton, Coventry, Sunderland and Newcastle

This was a consortia approach led by Active Communities Network, the Metropolitan Police and the Premier League. Engaged around 5,000 young people through arts, media, youth work and sports-based activities to enhance protective factors and their resilience to avoid substance misuse. The project also delivered issues-based workshops and accredited and non-accredited training (for participants, parents and carers).

DrugScope

Birmingham

Provided intensive preventative interventions to young people affected by parental substance misuse. Around 500 young people were provided with alcohol and drugs awareness sessions and one-to-one support.

Developing Initiatives for Support in the Community (DISC)

Leeds

Targeted work with young people whose parents were already involved with adult substance misuse services to address the impact of intergenerational substance misuse and criminal behaviour.

Mentor

Central Lancashire, Halton, Cornwall, Brent and Bournemouth

Project Street Talk embedded measurable brief interventions into the work of 20 local voluntary and community sector organisations who engaged around 3,000 young people.

Youth at Risk

Sunderland, Southend and Plymouth

Provided intensive support for 75 young people at risk of or already engaged in substance misuse and offending. Trained 60 staff from the voluntary and statutory sector and 75 volunteers from local communities to equip them with the skills to be able to work with the identified young people.

Groundwork

Bridgend, Corby, Nottingham, Leicester, Stoke-on-Trent, Blackpool, Leeds, Bradford, Tees Valley and Essex

Tested out a range of local approaches and interventions among young people and delivered a number of local projects aimed at reducing substance misuse and offending. Groundwork provided support and expertise to local networks.

Local evaluations

We are encouraging projects to develop their local evaluations of the various approaches funded under Choices to ensure that the learning helps to add to the evidence base on prevention and early intervention.

Barnardo’s have published their evaluation of the Choices project in Keighley which worked with vulnerable young people and their families who did not qualify for statutory intervention in relation to their substance misuse and related offending behaviour.

The evaluation looked at whether the project increased the capacity of local organisations to identify and respond appropriately to children and young people at risk of substance misuse and/or offending; and assessed short term outcomes on safer thinking and behavioural factors known to correlate with offending and substance misuse in young people.

The findings showed that a key worker approach was a successful way of engaging vulnerable young people and their families, and the use of a multi-agency panel was effective in bringing statutory and voluntary organisations together to work to common outcomes. Young people reported enhanced skills with respect to recognising risky situations, walking away from arguments, stressful situations or anti-social behaviour; improved family relationships, higher self-esteem and respect for others; and a number had re-engaged with education and training.

Contact

For further information on Choices, please email the offender strategies team.

Debut offences and future offending

The Home Office has published a research report looking at the relationship between an offender’s debut offence (first proven offence) and their future offending.

The study reviewed whether the type of crime committed as a first offence predicted chronic or serious offending. It also looked at how the numbers and types of first offences have changed over time.

The study considered the potential impact of changes in the numbers of first-time offenders committing major debut offences on the levels of future offending and then put forward suggestions for policies to reduce levels of crime.

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