cooterhein
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I was curious to see what everyone here would think of this. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/09/12/children-under-10-flagged-for-deradicalisation-every-day/
There is a special deradicalization program for children ages 9 and under. Overall, there is a mandate for (a statutory duty) for certain child-related authorities to report signs of extremism and at least make sure it's looked at. This goes for everyone under the age of 18, but apparently there is a special program for the very young.
There are some exact numbers that are given- the referrals have skyrocketed as of this year, although that also coincides with these reports being mandatory rather than advised and recommended. Previously, perhaps there was some question in some people's minds as to whether they should report something and who they should report to. Now it's much more clear what to do and who to talk to, and it's also required. So that's probably why it's being done so much more. As to the exact numbers that are given, 70% of those referred have to do with Islamist extremism (despite Muslims being around 5% of the UK population and around 10% of UK's young-child population) and 15% of the remainder belongs to far-right extremism (which is the leader among types of extremism that we are not very well prepared to counter....but it's clearly not what the kids are talking about most, not by a long shot). I'm sort of curious why you suppose those numbers look that way. From the start of this year to June, there have been 2,311 referrals in the under-18 category, you do the math on how many Muslims that is, and 352 of those have been in the under-10 category. This program was set up after the 7/7 attacks in 2005 (and, ironically, one of those attacks happened in a public space right across from a statue of Ghandi....I wonder if that was intentional)....but now 11 years later the program is becoming more firmly ensconced in the UK educational milieu.
There is a bit of a lack of figures where I would have liked more specificity, but that's not available here. The full-on Channel program (that's what it's called) is voluntary, and since this involves kids below the age of majority it most likely requires that their parents act on information and go through with it if they agree it requires intervention. "Many" of the kids who get flagged do not wind up in the program, "some" are but "others" just get a brief talk and that is judged to be enough. All of this is rather non-specific, and I have to read between the lines here, but it seems to be a situation where a couple thousand children get reported on for parroting extremist ideology, an unspecified number simply need to be "checked" (in the sense of a mild rebuke or reprimand, and the kid says okay I understand what's expected of me) while others are more trenchant in their beliefs that requires further evaluation, and then the parents are presumably informed of how bad it is and advised of the program and what it entails. Which they would then (less presumably) make the final decision on, given that the source is calling it "voluntary."
Of course, it is one thing for me to sit here in the United States reading numbers and sometimes-vague facts. It is quite another for Muslim parents in the UK to experience and navigate the process. So I have a couple of main questions.
What's it been like for Muslim parents and Muslim kids since 2005, with this whole program? Has the experience of it changed dramatically as of this year?
Do you think it's likely to achieve its stated purpose? And from what you know of the Channel program, what do you think of that?
And finally, what do you think of the more-recent decision to mandate these reports and cause all of this to become a 75%-more-common occurrence? Going along with that- at what point did you become aware of this program? Did you know about it way back in 2005? Did you just become aware of it this year? Is this the first that you're hearing about it now? I suppose your ability to answer most of these questions depends heavily on previous knowledge of the thing.
There is a special deradicalization program for children ages 9 and under. Overall, there is a mandate for (a statutory duty) for certain child-related authorities to report signs of extremism and at least make sure it's looked at. This goes for everyone under the age of 18, but apparently there is a special program for the very young.
There are some exact numbers that are given- the referrals have skyrocketed as of this year, although that also coincides with these reports being mandatory rather than advised and recommended. Previously, perhaps there was some question in some people's minds as to whether they should report something and who they should report to. Now it's much more clear what to do and who to talk to, and it's also required. So that's probably why it's being done so much more. As to the exact numbers that are given, 70% of those referred have to do with Islamist extremism (despite Muslims being around 5% of the UK population and around 10% of UK's young-child population) and 15% of the remainder belongs to far-right extremism (which is the leader among types of extremism that we are not very well prepared to counter....but it's clearly not what the kids are talking about most, not by a long shot). I'm sort of curious why you suppose those numbers look that way. From the start of this year to June, there have been 2,311 referrals in the under-18 category, you do the math on how many Muslims that is, and 352 of those have been in the under-10 category. This program was set up after the 7/7 attacks in 2005 (and, ironically, one of those attacks happened in a public space right across from a statue of Ghandi....I wonder if that was intentional)....but now 11 years later the program is becoming more firmly ensconced in the UK educational milieu.
There is a bit of a lack of figures where I would have liked more specificity, but that's not available here. The full-on Channel program (that's what it's called) is voluntary, and since this involves kids below the age of majority it most likely requires that their parents act on information and go through with it if they agree it requires intervention. "Many" of the kids who get flagged do not wind up in the program, "some" are but "others" just get a brief talk and that is judged to be enough. All of this is rather non-specific, and I have to read between the lines here, but it seems to be a situation where a couple thousand children get reported on for parroting extremist ideology, an unspecified number simply need to be "checked" (in the sense of a mild rebuke or reprimand, and the kid says okay I understand what's expected of me) while others are more trenchant in their beliefs that requires further evaluation, and then the parents are presumably informed of how bad it is and advised of the program and what it entails. Which they would then (less presumably) make the final decision on, given that the source is calling it "voluntary."
Of course, it is one thing for me to sit here in the United States reading numbers and sometimes-vague facts. It is quite another for Muslim parents in the UK to experience and navigate the process. So I have a couple of main questions.
What's it been like for Muslim parents and Muslim kids since 2005, with this whole program? Has the experience of it changed dramatically as of this year?
Do you think it's likely to achieve its stated purpose? And from what you know of the Channel program, what do you think of that?
And finally, what do you think of the more-recent decision to mandate these reports and cause all of this to become a 75%-more-common occurrence? Going along with that- at what point did you become aware of this program? Did you know about it way back in 2005? Did you just become aware of it this year? Is this the first that you're hearing about it now? I suppose your ability to answer most of these questions depends heavily on previous knowledge of the thing.