Social media related to violence by young people
Youth workers should be given training sessions on the link between social media and violence, experts have told the Guardian, amid warnings that gangs are increasingly using social media sites to taunt each other.
Criminology lecturer and youth worker Craig Pinkney, who runs one-day courses in the UK and internationally for people who work with young people, including youth workers, social workers and teachers, says the government needs to modernize its approach, theguardian.com reported.
The government should consider funding programs that educate youth workers in social media because lots of people are still using the same ideas they did in 2001 and 2005 and they are presenting them in 2017, when the scope has changed,” Pinkney told the Guardian.
“If there is a fight outside school now, for example, the chances are that social media has been involved and we help professionals understand that,” he said.
Earlier this week, the Metropolitan police commissioner, Cressida Dick, blamed social media for playing a part in youth violence. She told the Times that social media sites ‘rev people up’ and trivial disputes could escalate into violence ‘within minutes’ when rivals set out to goad each other on the Internet.
Pinkney started running the social media sessions for youth workers a year ago after writing a report on how gangs organize themselves online. He is one of a handful of practitioners to offer workshops like this, which come at a fee to charities and schools, and says there is an urgent need for professionals to gain awareness in this area.
He showed clips of young people taunting each other through music videos and in social media posts and offers advice to youth workers about how they can protect young people from this.
Dr. Simon Harding, a senior lecturer in criminology at Middlesex University, said: “We started noticing gangs using social media four years ago and since then [the numbers using it] have doubled every year … it’s hard to quantify that because there are no statistics or research, but every street gang I am familiar with now has an online presence,” he said. “Young people are completely immersed in this world … so it is a logical progression that gang activity takes place online.”
Debi Thomas, the project coordinator for the Catch22 Social Justice and Rehabilitation Dawes Unit in Wolverhampton, said that her role increasingly involved having discussions about social media.
“We have started to focus on it more over the years and it is a case of talking to young people about it and warning about the dangers. It is also about looking at the preventative side of things and going into schools and providing sessions about social media. If we are talking to high risk and high criminality young people then we will discuss alternatives to them calling each other out online.”
Harding noted that a lot of gangs had websites and fan followings online. He expressed concern about young people being groomed and inadvertently drawn into violent activities after making contact with gangs over social media. Harding said gangs used social media differently depending on their aims but popular platforms included Youtube and Snapchat.
A Youtube spokesperson said: “We work closely with organizations like the Metropolitan police to understand local context and so that we can understand where artistic expression escalates into real threats. We’re committed to continuing and improving our work on this issue to make sure Youtube is not a place for those who seek to do harm.”