Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- ONE Youth Crime Prevention: Myths and Reality
- TWO Sport Participation and Primary Crime Prevention
- THREE Sports and Secondary Crime Prevention: Youth at Risk
- FOUR Sports and Tertiary Crime Prevention: Desistance from Crime
- FIVE Theory of Change Underlying Sport-Based Programmes
- SIX Emerging Good Practices
- SEVEN Role of Coaches, Mentors, and Facilitators
- EIGHT Crime Prevention Outcomes and Implications for Future Investments
- Notes
- References
- Index
THREE - Sports and Secondary Crime Prevention: Youth at Risk
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 June 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- ONE Youth Crime Prevention: Myths and Reality
- TWO Sport Participation and Primary Crime Prevention
- THREE Sports and Secondary Crime Prevention: Youth at Risk
- FOUR Sports and Tertiary Crime Prevention: Desistance from Crime
- FIVE Theory of Change Underlying Sport-Based Programmes
- SIX Emerging Good Practices
- SEVEN Role of Coaches, Mentors, and Facilitators
- EIGHT Crime Prevention Outcomes and Implications for Future Investments
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
At the secondary level of crime prevention, sport-based programmes have been relied upon to reach and support youth deemed ‘at risk’. As discussed earlier, sport participation is mistakenly assumed to reform at-risk youth and prevent them from criminal involvement (Coakley, 2011; Eckholm, 2013; Riley et al, 2017). There is some evidence that sport can be an effective tool for recruiting and delivering other crime prevention interventions to mitigate risk factors and strengthen protective factors of crime and violence (Cameron and MacDougall, 2000; United Nations, 2020).
Many youth crime or drug prevention programmes use sports as a vehicle or platform for delivering various other forms of interventions. They are usually designed as early interventions to reduce the impact of risk factors and enhance corresponding protective factors, by targeting ‘high risk’ individuals or groups (Kelly, 2012a; 2012b). The nature and impact of these other interventions is sometimes unclear. The programmes may have many benefits for participants, but they tend to overstate their ability to prevent crime (Kelly, 2012b). The ‘evidence’ of their success, when there is any at all, is mostly anecdotal or based on the perceptions of participants or programme managers. Furthermore, many community-based programmes with limited funding focus on receptive youths and overemphasize the fact that these youth may somehow be ‘at risk’.
Some of the programmes focus primarily on drug prevention. However, as Crabbe observed, sport is used in drug prevention and treatment interventions because young people enjoy it, but it is for the same reason that they might also choose to use illicit drugs or engage in criminal activity or sport-related violence (Crabbe, 2000). Moreover, the whole approach seems oblivious of the problem of doping and the use of performance enhancing drugs.
Spruit and her colleagues (2018b) evaluated a Dutch sportbased programme for youth at risk for juvenile delinquency. The primary outcome was juvenile delinquency, measured by official police data. The secondary outcomes were risk and protective factors for delinquency, assessed with selfand teacher reports. The study found small but significant intervention effects on juvenile delinquency, and no effects on the risk and protective factors of juvenile delinquency (Spruit et al, 2018b, 2018b).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Youth Crime Prevention and SportsAn Evaluation of Sport-Based Programmes and their Effectiveness, pp. 46 - 60Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2022