Pubdate: Wed, 27 Dec 2006
Source: Dublin People (Ireland)
Copyright: 2006, Dublin People
Contact:  http://www.dublinpeople.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4374
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

DRUG AND PRISON FUTURE FOR DISADVANTAGED YOUTH

EARLY school leavers from disadvantaged areas are  seriously at risk 
of becoming involved in crime,  according to prison officials, 
community workers and  local politicians.

Both Merchants Quay Ireland and the Governor of  Mountjoy Prison say 
the vast majority of people in  prison and with drug problems have 
had little or no  secondary education.

Governor John Lonergan of Mountjoy told Southside  People that a 
whopping 94 per cent of inmates left  school before reaching 16 and 
over half of all  prisoners are semi-illiterate.

"School leaving is certainly a very clear indicator  that a young 
person is already at risk," he said.

"It is not automatic that if they are an early school  leaver they 
are going to be involved in drugs and  crime.

"But education or the lack of it is certainly a major  contributing 
factor. It certainly highlights that there  is potential for 
difficulty down the line.

"So I would totally agree with anyone who would say  that many young 
people who have no secondary education  are more at risk of becoming 
involved in crime and  drugs."

According to research carried out on behalf of Mountjoy  Prison, a 
total of 75 per cent of prisoners come from  Dublin's six most 
disadvantaged areas.

"The general areas that were identified to be  blackspots from the 
research were the North Inner City,  the South Inner City and the old 
Ballymun flats  complex," said Governor Lonergan.

"On the Southside of the Liffey, Oliver Bond flats,  Dolphin's Barn 
flats, a small part of the Crumlin area  and certain parts of 
Ballyfermot and Chapelizod were  identified.

"Paul O'Malley did research in Mountjoy in 1986, 1996  and 1997. It 
was a very comprehensive piece of research  but the weakness now is 
that it is eight-years-old.

"But the same blackspots are providing the same results  for the high 
number of people ending up in Mountjoy. It  has changed only 
slightly. New areas would have come on  stream, such as parts of 
Finglas, Clondalkin and  Tallaght.

"But generally we still have the same blackspots; they  are still 
supplying us with a huge number of  prisoners."

Governor Lonergan believes regeneration and education  are key 
factors in tackling the ongoing problem of  young people being 
involved in crime and drugs.

"What percentage of people from the old flats complex  in Ballymun, 
graduate to DCU, which is only 200-300  metres away?" he asked.

"That is the challenge: can we bring children through  the second 
level of education and then on to the third  level?

"You have to support the parents and you have to change  the whole 
culture of the area as well in terms of its  social status."

Tony Geoghegan of Merchants Quay Ireland backs up many  of Governor 
Lonergan's observations. He says that the  majority of drug addicts 
he has worked with have had no  secondary education.

He also wants to see the Government focusing more  attention on 
poverty in disadvantaged areas to prevent  more young people getting 
caught up in drug addiction.

"The biggest common dominator amongst a lot of people  that use our 
needle exchange is that they are early  school leavers," he said.

"I really do believe that if you can retain and support  people in 
education, to even just stay in for second  level, they have a chance 
of doing OK.

"I would like to see drug prevention focused much more  on supporting 
families and supporting anti-poverty  initiatives. It would certainly 
undermine a lot of the  demand for drugs.

"It's not by chance that drug users are most prevalent  in areas of 
poverty. So I think that real prevention is  not to mention drugs at 
all - real prevention is  supporting people in poverty; it's about 
supporting  people in families and to keep kids in school."

According to this summer's National Education Welfare  Board 
Attendance Report, one in every five primary  school students in the 
most disadvantaged primary  schools missed 20 or more school days 
compared to one  in every 16 primary school students in the least 
disadvantaged schools.

It was no great surprise to Independent TD Tony Gregory  that the 
report confirmed that areas of economic  disadvantage have the worst 
school attendance records.

Deputy Gregory also believes that some children in  disadvantaged 
areas get involved in crime and drugs  because of increasing social 
disadvantage in  underprivileged areas throughout Dublin.

"One follows logically from the other," he says.

"If you examine where the early school leavers are, 99  per cent of 
them are in schools serving disadvantaged  areas. It follows that 
there is a link with social  disadvantage and early school leaving.

"That goes on to compound the problem; the child leaves  early 
because of the disadvantage in the family  background and living environment.

"The child goes out of school and is more likely to get  involved in 
anti-social behaviour, drug abuse and  crime. The way to tackle it is 
to eliminate social  disadvantage.

"We have the second most unequal society in the world,  we are told. 
While we are very affluent, some  communities are, relatively 
speaking, very poor.

"If you don't address that and put resources into  disadvantaged 
areas, you will inevitably have many  early school leavers going from 
one problem to another  whether it's drug abuse or crime.

"But certainly they won't have a chance to better  themselves; the 
only way to get out of a situation of  disadvantage is through 
education and becoming  qualified and eventually getting a decent job."