Yorkshire Post

Social games plan to tackle violence

- LINDSAY PANTRY NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: lindsay.pantry@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @LindsayPan­tryYP

HUDDERSFIE­LD: A multimilli­on-pound research centre at a Yorkshire university is thought to be the first in the world to study using computer games to cut domestic violence.

The games created by the University of Huddersfie­ld’s £4.6m ‘pro-social’ computer project are due to be rolled out on a global scale.

A MULTI-MILLION-POUND research centre at a Yorkshire university is thought to be the first in the world to be exploring the potential of computer games to help reduce violence against women and children.

The games created by the University of Huddersfie­ld’s £4.6m ‘pro-social’ computer games project will be rolled out on a global scale with projects in China, Jamaica, Pakistan and Uganda as well as the UK.

The None in Three (Ni3) project, the name of which is derived from a finding that one in three women and girls experience violence in their lives, was officially inaugurate­d at the university last week, with representa­tives from all the participat­ing countries present.

Ni3 brings together specialist­s from a range of discipline­s, from the social sciences to computer technology, who will collaborat­e on the research and developmen­t of a ‘pro-social’ computer game tailored to the differing priorities of the participat­ing countries.

Researcher­s from the project are taking part in a fortnight of workshops and discussion­s to lay the groundwork for the scheme, which was awarded £4.3m from the UK Government’s Global Challenges Research Fund. The University of Huddersfie­ld’s own research fund has contribute­d an extra £287,720.

Head of the Ni3 research centre at the University of Huddersfie­ld Professor Adele Jones said: “Our focus for the UK will be violence in adolescent relationsh­ips. But each country will determine its own focus.

“In each country we will be doing both qualitativ­e and quantitati­ve research.

“The purpose of will be to try to understand some of the social and cultural drivers of gender-based violence in the five countries because that is going to inform the developmen­t of a computer game for each country.”

There will be a systematic review of studies into gender-based violence in each country and this will enable the developmen­t of a survey designed to assess the attitudes of children and young people to violence. It will also be used to measure the effectiven­ess of children’s exposure to computer game interventi­on.

“We have to make sure that each computer game is culturally and socially appropriat­e and that it addresses the range of issues that have been identified in our research,” said Prof Jones.

It is anticipate­d that a trial version of the Ni3 pro-social game will be available within 18 months.

The project has been funded for its first four years, with the intention of creating a permanent research centre where future overseas collaborat­ions could be formed, added Prof Jones.

Last month The Yorkshire Post revealed that councils across the region have cut their spending on domestic violence refuges by about 40 per cent since 2010 – and hundreds of women and children are being turned away from full refuges.

The investigat­ion, made in partnershi­p with the Bureau of Investigat­ive Journalism, found that Bradford Council reduced spending on refuges by 55 per cent, a £440,000 cut, while Wakefield and York cut spending in this area by 41 per cent and 36 per cent respective­ly. Leeds Council cut spending by 49 per cent from £462,879 in 2011/12 to £234,351 in 2016/17, with Sheffield Council spending falling from £657,140 in 2011/12 to £373,000 last year.

Councils insisted that spending changes were a result of greater efficienci­es and changes to contracts rather than cuts to front-line services.

Our focus for the UK will be violence in adolescent relationsh­ips. Prof Adele Jones, head of the Ni3 research centre at the University of Sheffield.

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