'Entrenched' family abuse revealed

A report found domestic and sexual abuse, teenage pregnancies and educational failure was prevalent in the UK's most troubled families
18 July 2012

A report into England's most troubled families has painted a grim picture of sexual abuse and welfare dependency going back generations.

In many households violence is endemic and "entrenched cycles of suffering problems and causing problems" poisons whole social networks.

The stark assessment came from David Cameron's troubled families tsar Louise Casey - who has been tasked with turning round the lives of the 120,000 most dysfunctional by 2015.

Ms Casey conducted more than a dozen in-depth interviews to compile her report on the challenge the Government faces. She found that experiences were often passed from generation to generation, such as domestic and sexual abuse, teenage pregnancies, police call-outs and educational failure.

"The prevalence of child sexual and physical abuse and sometimes child rape was striking and shocking," the report said. "It became clear that in many of these families the abuse of children by in many cases parents, siblings, half-siblings and extended family and friends was a factor in their dysfunction.

"Some discussed it as if as it was almost expected and just a part of what they had experienced in life. Children often had not been protected by their parents. In many of the families the sexual abuse repeated itself in the next generation... There were also incidents where families talked about incest."

Other common themes included people having children very young, and large numbers of them - often with different partners.

The report backed tackling the inter-linked issues of a whole family, rather than dealing with single problems or single individuals within a household. Ms Casey said: "I am not making excuses for any family failing to send their kids to school or causing trouble in their community. However, unless we really understand what it is about these families that means they behave in this way, we can't start to turn their lives around."

Communities Secretary Eric Pickles said: "I welcome this report as an important part of that process as it provides a real insight into these families' dysfunctional lives. My civil servants are not just sitting in an office in Whitehall telling local authorities what to do but seeking to gain a true understanding of the challenges they face."

The Government has promised to pay upper-tier local authorities up to £4,000 per eligible family for reducing truancy, youth crime and anti-social behaviour, or putting parents back into work. The programme's £448 million three-year budget is drawn from across seven departments in a bid to join up local services.

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