08/08/2012

Report Calls For 'Have-A-Go Hero' Training for Public

“Have-a-go hero” training, including how to control antisocial behaviour and how to deal with conflict and aggression should be offered to the public, a new report has said.

The report has been published by the Royal Society of Arts (RSA) and says a radical "citizens' defence" approach to tackling antisocial behaviour is needed one year after the English riots.

The study by Ben Rogers, director of the Centre for London thinktank, acknowledges that the public will need to be trained in self-defence skills as well as how to read a situation if they are to be encouraged to intervene on the streets.

The proposal is partly based on the experience of Dfuse, a small charity set up in 2007, to provide courses by experienced police trainers and hostage negotiators in defusing social conflict and responding to crime and antisocial behaviour.

The Dfuse website says: "Most people do not want to stand by when someone else is in difficulty or when we see others vandalising, bullying or being threatening. We have a natural urge to try to cool arguments or prevent fighting but in today's streets such actions feel very risky. Worse still, there are frequent reports of people who were trying to help getting hurt." The organisation offers ways of responding without putting yourself or others in danger.

The RSA report says that such methods should be adopted nationally. "With the real prospect of traditional police patrolling being scaled back, now is surely the time to focus seriously on agreeing the core skills that active citizens need – individually or collectively – if they are to step up to the mark," says Rogers.

"The coalition government has signalled its determination to encourage and support citizens to 'have a go' and intervene to stop criminal behaviour. But to do this citizens need training and the government needs a strategy if these emerging ideas are to be supported and developed."

The report suggests such training should include how to restrain an assailant and make a citizen's arrest as well as how to defuse and mediate a situation.

It says the public have little or no confidence to intervene and this approach would go some way towards healing anxious communities.

Rogers says police officers or lay trainers should offer courses to people. As well as members of the public, frontline public servants such as park keepers, public transport workers, parking enforcement officers and community and youth workers should be included.

(H/GK)

Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

15 April 2005
Workplace racism is ‘damaging’ careers, TUC claims
Racism in the British workplace is “damaging” the career prospects of many black workers, the Trade Union Congress (TUC) has claimed. The TUC said that black workers get less training opportunities, although they are often better qualified than their white counterparts.
29 March 2006
Deepcut review rejects call for public inquiry
A report into the deaths of four young army recruits at Deepcut barracks has rejected calls for a public inquiry. The review by Nicolas Blake QC investigated the deaths of Privates Sean Benton, 20, from Hastings, Cheryl James, 18, from North Wales, Geoff Gray, 17, from Co Durham and James Collinson, 17, from Perth.
02 April 2014
Wales Could Restrict The Use Of E-Cigarettes In Public Places
New measures to address some of Wales' major public health challenges, including high levels of drinking and smoking, are being put forward by the Welsh Government today.
20 June 2005
Government launches consultation on smoking proposals
The government is to begin consultation on proposals to ban smoking in most public places in England. The government hopes that the consultation will lead to a Bill being introduced in the autumn. The ‘Choosing Health’ Public Health White Paper published last November, unveiled proposals to ban smoking in all enclosed public spaces and workplaces.
21 March 2005
Army recruits at risk from abuse
Army recruits are at high risk of bullying, harassment, self-harm and injury, an independent report has claimed. The report, conducted by the Adult Learning Inspectorate (ALI) also found that there were high drop-out rates and said that training and welfare needed to be "better managed, better organised and better controlled".