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Psychologist plays down rising youth
crime
Official figures issued last week showed a rise in
juvenile crime in Switzerland between 1999 and 2003, including a 40 per
cent increase in violent crime. But in an interview with swissinfo,
youth psychologist Allan Guggenbühl says the rise in convictions does
not necessarily mean that society has become more violent. Guggenbühl
believes the increase partly reflects changing attitudes towards
violence, saying society is quick to react to any form of aggression. He
claims the young lawbreakers he deals with are not the "monsters" people
sometimes believe them to be. Guggenbühl, who runs a conflict management
institute, says young people are often unsure of their place in society
and the rules governing it.
On Monday the Federal Statistics Office released
figures showing that there were 13,500 juvenile convictions last year,
1,200 more than in 1999. The vast majority of these convictions – 80 per
cent – were related to theft or drug consumption. A further 13 per cent
were linked to violent crime, up three per cent on the 1999 level. The
number of youths convicted of violent crime rose from 1,237 to 1,729
over the five-year period.
How would
you explain this 40 per cent increase in violent crime among juveniles?
Allan Guggenbühl: One explanation is that there
are groups of adolescents who define themselves through violence, and
who try to conquer the public area through violence and aggression.
That’s a very problematic group, and there we can see a certain
increase.
But there’s a second reason and that is that we become
more sensitive to the issue of violence and aggression among adolescents
the older we get, and our society is dominated by older people and by
the values of older people. We have to realise that young people – and
young men especially between the ages of 18 and 27 – have always been
aggressive or have a lot of energy to get rid of. The question is: how
does society deal with it?
How, in your view, does society deal
with it?
A.G.: Our society tends to pathologise it. It tends to
give very little room for this kind of aggression and this means that
when there’s an outburst of aggression we immediately think this is
something very serious which needs to be reported. If you look back
historically, and at the different areas of Switzerland, you see that
the figures go up and down continually. It’s the perception that’s very
important.
Have you yourself noticed a shift in
young peoples’ attitudes or behaviour over this five-year period?
A.G.: A lot of institutions or schools come to me and
say they don’t know how to deal with these young adolescents, who are
very aggressive and violent. When I work with them in groups, or within
the school, what I’ve found again and again is that these are mostly
adolescents who are trying to find an orientation, a sense in their
life, a goal. And one is able to work with them – they are not monsters.
You talked about the ageing population.
Do young people perhaps feel marginalised in society?
A.G.: The problem is our society is divided into
different areas and young people want to know whose territory they are
in and what codes are in force there. What is lacking is grown-ups who
tell them what codes apply in the outside world and what reaction they
might get if they don’t respect them. So they are left in a void. We
tend to say [of problem cases] that they are violent or have become
problematic and transfer them to some professional. We forget that what
they are actually seeking is a direct confrontation with grown-up people
who are ready to introduce them into society.
So, is there hope that many of these
young people will stop resorting to violence?
A.G.: It all depends on what we do, if we have the
resources to take care of these young people, and if we’re ready to
devote time and energy to them.
The punishment meted out for violent
crimes tends not to be prison, but community service. What do you think
of that?
A.G.: I think this is an excellent way, and something
specific to our country. If you look at California in the United States,
they have zero tolerance. We have a tradition of trying to get [young
criminals] back into the community and these programmes are often very
good.
Morven McLean
4 March 2005
http://www.swissinfo.org/sen/Swissinfo.html?siteSect=111&sid=5577680
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