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You are warmly invited to the event below. Please do disseminate around your networks
Professor Leanne Dowse will be visiting MMU from September 29th - Oct 5th. As part of this visit, MCYS is hosting a public lecture at which Leanne will speak. This ties in with a piece of DfE research that MCYS are currently working on, focusing on the experiences of young people with special educational needs and disabilities in the youth justice system.
The link for booking is:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/mcys-presents-lost-in-transition-associate-professor-leanne-dowse-uonsw-tickets-26582306394

Thanks,
Hannah
The Manchester Centre for Youth Studies, Manchester Metropolitan University Public Lecture
Associate Professor Leanne Dowse University of New South Wales, Australia
Lost in Transition: young people, disability and the criminal justice system
Associate Professor Leanne Dowse will be speaking about her work around young people, disability and the criminal justice system. This will be followed by a panel discussion including lead policy makers from the Department for Education (DfE) and the Youth Justice Board (YJB) and MMU.
Leanne's talk will draw attention to the fact that there is significant and growing concern in the global North at the social exclusion and criminalisation of some young disabled people. An emerging body of evidence suggests that this group figure significantly in policing, justice and correctional settings, both as victims and as offenders. Their trajectories into the criminal justice system typically begin early and, in the absence of an effective social care response, continue throughout their lives.
This lecture will explore the ways in which these young people's experiences interlock in complex ways across compounding impairment, histories of victimization, early and persistent social disadvantage, placement in out of home care, early educational disengagement, precarious housing and substance misuse. Multiple poorly supported transitions within and between systems of social care are also a hallmark of their experience.
Drawing on the challenges identified in the Australian experience, discussion will centre on the effects of limited systemic capacity to recognise and respond to these complex needs in exacerbating vulnerability for this group, whose care and containment are often defrayed to the criminal justice system as the key system of response. Pathways for effective and targeted prevention and support are highlighted.
The panel discussion will draw on both a UK and Australian context and will link with current research being carried out by MCYS in partnership with Achievement for All (AfA) and the Association of YOT Managers (AYM) for the DfE.
This will be followed by a drinks reception.
When
Monday, 3 October 2016 from 17:00 to 19:00 (BST)
Where
70 Oxford St - 70 Oxford Street, Manchester, M1 5NH



Dr Hannah Smithson- Reader in Criminology
Dept of Sociology, Room 419 Geoffrey Manton Building, Rosamond Street West,  Manchester, M15 6LL
Tel: +44 (0)161 247 3442
Head of the Manchester Centre for Youth Studies<http://www.hssr.mmu.ac.uk/mcys/>| Follow us on Twitter: @MCYS_MMU<https://twitter.com/mcys_mmu>
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Recent Publications
Ralphs, R. and Smithson, H. (2015) 'European Responses to Gangs' in Decker, S. and Pyrooz, D. The Handbook of Gangs, Wiley.

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