INTRO: Welcome to the NSPCC Learning Podcast, where
INTRO: we share learning and expertise in child protection
INTRO: from inside and outside of the organisation.
INTRO: We aim to create debate, encourage reflection
INTRO: and share good practice on how we can all work
INTRO: together to keep babies, children and young people
INTRO: safe.
PRODUCER: Welcome to the NSPCC Learning Podcast.
PRODUCER: This episode features an interview with Anne
PRODUCER: Longfield, the Executive Chair of the Centre for
PRODUCER: Young Lives and Children's Commissioner for
PRODUCER: England from 2015 to 2021.
PRODUCER: Earlier this year Anne published 'Young Lives,
PRODUCER: Big Ambitions', a new book which examines the
PRODUCER: problems facing vulnerable young people in the
PRODUCER: UK. You can find out more about the book on
PRODUCER: the NSPCC Library online catalogue.
PRODUCER: In this interview, recorded in June 2024, Anne
PRODUCER: shares her thoughts on what needs to be done to
PRODUCER: improve the safeguarding support available to
PRODUCER: teenagers across the UK, including implementing
PRODUCER: a more joined-up approach to recognising the
PRODUCER: risks that teenagers face and providing better
PRODUCER: access to early intervention and youth work
PRODUCER: services.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: My name's Wesley Powley-Baker and I
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: work at the NSPCC as a Safeguarding
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Manager in the Safeguarding Unit, and
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: today we're really pleased to have
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Anne Longfield for today's podcast.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: In the main, we're going to be
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: talking about Anne's recent book that
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: she's just published called 'Young
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Lives, Big Ambitions'.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Just a bit of background on Anne:
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Anne was the Children's Commissioner
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: for England from 2015 to 2021
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: and is now chair of the Commission on
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Young Lives. She spent the last three
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: decades working to improve the lives
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: of the most vulnerable children and
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: earlier this year, as I've said, she's
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: published a book, 'Young Lives, Big
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Ambitions', which explores how
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: vulnerable children and teens are
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: being let down by the system that
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: exists to protect them, presenting
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: solutions to give every young person
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: the best chance to succeed in life.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: So, Anne, thank you for joining us.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Pleasure. Thank you so much.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: The first question I'd like to ask,
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: and I'm sure our audience would be
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: really interested in this, is what
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: was the journey that led to the
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: writing of this book for you?
ANNE LONGFIELD: Well, quite a long one.
ANNE LONGFIELD: You've just mentioned three decades there,
ANNE LONGFIELD: and there's even a little bit more than
ANNE LONGFIELD: that. But, essentially, over the years,
ANNE LONGFIELD: all of my work has been about improving
ANNE LONGFIELD: outcomes, improving the law, improving
ANNE LONGFIELD: our offerings, if you like, as a country,
ANNE LONGFIELD: as a society for children, but especially
ANNE LONGFIELD: vulnerable children.
ANNE LONGFIELD: From the early days of my work in
ANNE LONGFIELD: areas of London and then in other areas
ANNE LONGFIELD: around the country, it was very clear to
ANNE LONGFIELD: me that there was a significant number of
ANNE LONGFIELD: children who had a mountain to climb as
ANNE LONGFIELD: they grew up compared to other children,
ANNE LONGFIELD: and that so often they were
ANNE LONGFIELD: left without help.
ANNE LONGFIELD: They were marginalised
ANNE LONGFIELD: until the point where the problem became
ANNE LONGFIELD: a crisis and intervention was needed.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And so often their life chances and
ANNE LONGFIELD: expectations were massively diminished as
ANNE LONGFIELD: a result. And on the other side of it,
ANNE LONGFIELD: which feeds my optimistic elements
ANNE LONGFIELD: — which hopefully are in the main
ANNE LONGFIELD: — I was very aware that you could do
ANNE LONGFIELD: things about this. I worked in the very
ANNE LONGFIELD: early days with families and parents
ANNE LONGFIELD: in parts of south west London where
ANNE LONGFIELD: proper ongoing support was
ANNE LONGFIELD: available, and I was part of
ANNE LONGFIELD: of delivering that.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And with that kind of expectation that
ANNE LONGFIELD: support was there, families were really
ANNE LONGFIELD: able to achieve huge things and
ANNE LONGFIELD: plan for their future with their kids and
ANNE LONGFIELD: have that reliance or that
ANNE LONGFIELD: confidence that support was there when
ANNE LONGFIELD: they needed it. So I've always known
ANNE LONGFIELD: the power of having support
ANNE LONGFIELD: that you could turn to and you could rely
ANNE LONGFIELD: on and trusted people that could do that.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And I guess that has influenced me
ANNE LONGFIELD: throughout.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And to get to the point of the
ANNE LONGFIELD: specific topic of this book, all of my
ANNE LONGFIELD: work as Children's Commissioner built on
ANNE LONGFIELD: that. One of the things that you have as
ANNE LONGFIELD: your powers as Children's Commissioner is
ANNE LONGFIELD: that you're able to gather data from any
ANNE LONGFIELD: public body regarding children —not
ANNE LONGFIELD: personal data, but administrative data
ANNE LONGFIELD: that you can then analyse and you can go
ANNE LONGFIELD: behind the headlines, go behind the
ANNE LONGFIELD: findings and find out what's really going
ANNE LONGFIELD: on. And I spent those six years as
ANNE LONGFIELD: Children's Commissioner really
ANNE LONGFIELD: establishing the levels of vulnerability
ANNE LONGFIELD: in this country and also the nature of
ANNE LONGFIELD: that to really attempt to get the focus
ANNE LONGFIELD: on the root causes of this and getting
ANNE LONGFIELD: ahead of the game in terms of preventing
ANNE LONGFIELD: the crises that we can all see in front
ANNE LONGFIELD: of our eyes. It was very clear to me as
ANNE LONGFIELD: Children's Commissioner, but also at the
ANNE LONGFIELD: end of my term, that actually there
ANNE LONGFIELD: was a huge paucity of research and
ANNE LONGFIELD: knowledge about vulnerability for
ANNE LONGFIELD: teenagers.
ANNE LONGFIELD: There was a collective horror
ANNE LONGFIELD: at some of the headlines that we would all
ANNE LONGFIELD: see in the newspapers or in the serious
ANNE LONGFIELD: case reviews.
ANNE LONGFIELD: But actually there wasn't the machinery or
ANNE LONGFIELD: policy space or policy coordination within
ANNE LONGFIELD: government to spend
ANNE LONGFIELD: the time needed to understand why these
ANNE LONGFIELD: things happened and how they could be
ANNE LONGFIELD: prevented.
ANNE LONGFIELD: So I spent the
ANNE LONGFIELD: following two years, having founded
ANNE LONGFIELD: a Commission on Young Lives to look at
ANNE LONGFIELD: these things, understanding that and
ANNE LONGFIELD: bringing forward what I hoped
ANNE LONGFIELD: would be not only practical and doable
ANNE LONGFIELD: solutions, but also eye-catching solutions
ANNE LONGFIELD: that would really put forward
ANNE LONGFIELD: a plan nationally and locally and put a
ANNE LONGFIELD: policy emphasis and highlight onto that,
ANNE LONGFIELD: which I hope that has done.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And that work really led to a lot
ANNE LONGFIELD: of the thinking about the book and
ANNE LONGFIELD: bringing all that together into a
ANNE LONGFIELD: narrative about what goes wrong and
ANNE LONGFIELD: also what we could achieve as a country
ANNE LONGFIELD: if we were more ambitious for our
ANNE LONGFIELD: vulnerable children and our teens.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Thank you. That was a great
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: introduction and context.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Moving on a bit to that first
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: chapter, which I thought was really,
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: really powerful. You know, these are
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: young lives and particularly the
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: story around Jayden and Jacob
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: and I have a bit of a question around
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: that. So in the beginning of that
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: chapter in the book, you talk about
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: the failure to find "reachable
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: moments" when children could be
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: better supported, or in the worst
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: instances when children's lives could
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: have been saved. So what do you think
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: those... I mean, you've begun to talk
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: about that in that introduction, but
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: what do you think about what those
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: reachable moments look like?
ANNE LONGFIELD: I think what is very evident is that
ANNE LONGFIELD: we haven't recognised
ANNE LONGFIELD: the risks that face teenagers enough
ANNE LONGFIELD: in the past.
ANNE LONGFIELD: That recognition hasn't gained its place
ANNE LONGFIELD: in many of the statutory services that
ANNE LONGFIELD: need to be much more aware of this and
ANNE LONGFIELD: need to be both alert but also clear of
ANNE LONGFIELD: their role.
ANNE LONGFIELD: That's not to say there aren't brilliant
ANNE LONGFIELD: people doing good things, but whether you
ANNE LONGFIELD: look in children's social care, whether
ANNE LONGFIELD: you look in the police, whether you look
ANNE LONGFIELD: in some of the work around schools,
ANNE LONGFIELD: there hasn't been that joined-up approach
ANNE LONGFIELD: to being able to understand what the
ANNE LONGFIELD: symptoms of vulnerability are, nor indeed
ANNE LONGFIELD: when interventions are needed.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And, as a result, children have often
ANNE LONGFIELD: fallen through the gaps.
ANNE LONGFIELD: I mean, the serious cases reviews speak
ANNE LONGFIELD: for themselves in terms of the horror of
ANNE LONGFIELD: how some of those tragedies happen.
ANNE LONGFIELD: But also, I am told constantly
ANNE LONGFIELD: by professionals working with young people
ANNE LONGFIELD: that building relationships with young
ANNE LONGFIELD: people who are often living lives of huge
ANNE LONGFIELD: risk, there's not enough time spent on
ANNE LONGFIELD: those relationships.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And at the end of the day, it's the
ANNE LONGFIELD: relationships that matter.
ANNE LONGFIELD: It's the relationships that young people
ANNE LONGFIELD: need to be able to have that confidence
ANNE LONGFIELD: there's someone to turn to.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Be able to get advice, able to get
ANNE LONGFIELD: support. And so often
ANNE LONGFIELD: those young people have missed out and
ANNE LONGFIELD: faced huge escalating risks sometimes
ANNE LONGFIELD: as a result.
ANNE LONGFIELD: So those moments: well, you know, there
ANNE LONGFIELD: are some clear indicators.
ANNE LONGFIELD: You don't have to put it in professional
ANNE LONGFIELD: jargon; just when things are going wrong.
ANNE LONGFIELD: As a parent, you know when things aren't
ANNE LONGFIELD: going right in terms of your child's life.
ANNE LONGFIELD: When they're struggling at school, when
ANNE LONGFIELD: they don't want to go to school, when
ANNE LONGFIELD: there's behaviour problems at school, when
ANNE LONGFIELD: the school may be instituting
ANNE LONGFIELD: suspensions or exclusions, when children
ANNE LONGFIELD: are spending long periods of time with
ANNE LONGFIELD: groups of friends you don't know or
ANNE LONGFIELD: changing groups of friends.
ANNE LONGFIELD: All of those points are points that we
ANNE LONGFIELD: should be alert to young people's
ANNE LONGFIELD: welfare and wellbeing.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And as parents and as professionals, we
ANNE LONGFIELD: need to be alert to that. So if a school
ANNE LONGFIELD: has got a child who isn't
ANNE LONGFIELD: attending school often, a child who
ANNE LONGFIELD: is struggling with certain situations, a
ANNE LONGFIELD: child who is at risk of being excluded,
ANNE LONGFIELD: then that's a huge red flag for
ANNE LONGFIELD: 'something is going on'.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And what I think we need to see is,
ANNE LONGFIELD: at that point, a response that has —
ANNE LONGFIELD: be it a pastoral team or preventative
ANNE LONGFIELD: work with children at risk and families
ANNE LONGFIELD: from social care — to be able to start
ANNE LONGFIELD: wrapping around support and being able to
ANNE LONGFIELD: help get out of that situation.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And, of course, the most glaringly obvious
ANNE LONGFIELD: point where there is one of those moments
ANNE LONGFIELD: is when children end up in A&E.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Often with boys, they will end up in A&E
ANNE LONGFIELD: where there's been
ANNE LONGFIELD: some kind of serious violence or knife
ANNE LONGFIELD: attack and they've ended up injured.
ANNE LONGFIELD: For girls, less likely to be in that
ANNE LONGFIELD: situation, but equally they
ANNE LONGFIELD: may go into A&E and talk about mental
ANNE LONGFIELD: health or sexual health.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Those are very obvious points where no one
ANNE LONGFIELD: can ignore the fact something is going
ANNE LONGFIELD: very wrong here.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And one of the things that we've talked
ANNE LONGFIELD: about in the book is about, at that point,
ANNE LONGFIELD: to be able to have youth workers, girls
ANNE LONGFIELD: workers, others there who can
ANNE LONGFIELD: work intensively alongside those
ANNE LONGFIELD: young people to be able to help them
ANNE LONGFIELD: overcome whatever challenges, get out of
ANNE LONGFIELD: whatever situation they're in.
ANNE LONGFIELD: But it shouldn't take to the point where
ANNE LONGFIELD: you've got a child being brought into an
ANNE LONGFIELD: A&E covered in blood for us to know that
ANNE LONGFIELD: something isn't going right.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And it shouldn't be that the only point
ANNE LONGFIELD: our services can respond to the extent
ANNE LONGFIELD: needed is if it's actually a matter of
ANNE LONGFIELD: life or death. We need to come way
ANNE LONGFIELD: upstream in understanding where those
ANNE LONGFIELD: children have vulnerabilities at home —
ANNE LONGFIELD: before school, during primary, and as
ANNE LONGFIELD: they move inro secondary school — and also
ANNE LONGFIELD: be able to see the signs and respond to
ANNE LONGFIELD: those signs when things are going well.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And all of those moments where children
ANNE LONGFIELD: are showing the signs of vulnerability, be
ANNE LONGFIELD: that in school, be that not attending
ANNE LONGFIELD: school, all of those points are where
ANNE LONGFIELD: I would like to see there's enough
ANNE LONGFIELD: relationships there to be able to bring
ANNE LONGFIELD: that ring of protection around them.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Now, youth workers in particular
ANNE LONGFIELD: are often the ones who are able to
ANNE LONGFIELD: deliver on that magic.
ANNE LONGFIELD: You know, when children might not
ANNE LONGFIELD: feel able to, or that
ANNE LONGFIELD: they want to, confide in schools or
ANNE LONGFIELD: confide in parents or do any of the things
ANNE LONGFIELD: that those people want them to do,
ANNE LONGFIELD: actually, it's youth workers who will be
ANNE LONGFIELD: able to be the ones that find that
ANNE LONGFIELD: connection and work with them to be able
ANNE LONGFIELD: to develop their trust and relationship
ANNE LONGFIELD: and also support them and guide them to a
ANNE LONGFIELD: different place. Which is why in the book
ANNE LONGFIELD: I put such an emphasis on youth workers
ANNE LONGFIELD: being part of that solution.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Just picking up on that theme a bit
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: more about relationships, raising
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: awareness so we understand those
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: signs and of where to intervene.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: But also you talked about — which I
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: love — that idea of youth workers
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: delivering that magic.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: And the next question I was going to
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: ask was about support at the right
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: time and the right place to properly
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: prevent abuse.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: And I had a question about what that
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: meant to properly invest in early
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: years, but maybe I could widen that a
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: bit more to what does that properly
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: mean to invest...
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: maybe you want to say something about youth workers
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: there?
ANNE LONGFIELD: Yeah, I would say...
ANNE LONGFIELD: I mean, the book is essentially about
ANNE LONGFIELD: teenagers. It's about how we
ANNE LONGFIELD: provide better support for
ANNE LONGFIELD: teenagers who are struggling
ANNE LONGFIELD: and how we have high ambitions for their
ANNE LONGFIELD: lives for them.
ANNE LONGFIELD: But, you know, at the heart of that
ANNE LONGFIELD: is a recognition that actually we
ANNE LONGFIELD: need to start with that support from the
ANNE LONGFIELD: absolute earliest weeks of life.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Now, I spent a good slice
ANNE LONGFIELD: of my life in the past arguing for and
ANNE LONGFIELD: then helping develop and deliver Sure
ANNE LONGFIELD: Start children centres.
ANNE LONGFIELD: That for me was a vital
ANNE LONGFIELD: part of the infrastructure that would help
ANNE LONGFIELD: those families who needed a bit more help
ANNE LONGFIELD: to be able to have the back-up,
ANNE LONGFIELD: the advice, the relationships with support
ANNE LONGFIELD: near to home to be able to
ANNE LONGFIELD: bring up their children in the way they
ANNE LONGFIELD: wanted to.
ANNE LONGFIELD: My hopes and ambitions are that
ANNE LONGFIELD: we have a rebuilt infrastructure
ANNE LONGFIELD: for children and families from birth
ANNE LONGFIELD: onwards in any new government.
ANNE LONGFIELD: I don't care much about what it's called,
ANNE LONGFIELD: but it is about place-based support like
ANNE LONGFIELD: children centres. So helping kids
ANNE LONGFIELD: get to the point where they can go into
ANNE LONGFIELD: school with a bounce is really vital, and
ANNE LONGFIELD: we know that the kids I'm talking about in
ANNE LONGFIELD: this book are the ones that are largely
ANNE LONGFIELD: going to start school behind their peers
ANNE LONGFIELD: and stay behind their peers throughout.
ANNE LONGFIELD: So enabling that not to happen, ensuring
ANNE LONGFIELD: that they get the best support in terms of
ANNE LONGFIELD: speech and language, in terms of emotional
ANNE LONGFIELD: development, in terms of helping them
ANNE LONGFIELD: get ahead at that moment of starting
ANNE LONGFIELD: school is really important.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Primary schools that have a strong
ANNE LONGFIELD: focus on nurture, that work with families,
ANNE LONGFIELD: that offer family support, that work with
ANNE LONGFIELD: other services in the local community,
ANNE LONGFIELD: including public services, to be able to
ANNE LONGFIELD: offer a joined-up hub, if you like, of
ANNE LONGFIELD: support any children and family centres
ANNE LONGFIELD: or hubs of the future do need to work
ANNE LONGFIELD: throughout primary school years
ANNE LONGFIELD: and then into the teenage years too.
ANNE LONGFIELD: I think we underuse the great
ANNE LONGFIELD: assets that a school has in
ANNE LONGFIELD: terms of its resource within the community
ANNE LONGFIELD: after school, during school holidays.
ANNE LONGFIELD: We're at a moment in time where breakfast
ANNE LONGFIELD: clubs are back on the agenda and being
ANNE LONGFIELD: discussed. I think these are all
ANNE LONGFIELD: essential support platforms that can help
ANNE LONGFIELD: families and help children in terms of
ANNE LONGFIELD: reducing poverty, in terms of offering
ANNE LONGFIELD: additional support, in terms of delivering
ANNE LONGFIELD: really important things like nutritious
ANNE LONGFIELD: meals and access to activities;
ANNE LONGFIELD: and then following that through in terms
ANNE LONGFIELD: of secondary schools, and increasing these
ANNE LONGFIELD: children move into their secondary
ANNE LONGFIELD: school, that importance of youth workers
ANNE LONGFIELD: as one of those delivery agents to be
ANNE LONGFIELD: around children's lives.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Again, huge decline in the number of
ANNE LONGFIELD: places for young people to be in their
ANNE LONGFIELD: community over the last decade plus.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Huge decrease in number of youth centres
ANNE LONGFIELD: in the number of secondary schools who are
ANNE LONGFIELD: operating after school, during school
ANNE LONGFIELD: holidays and the like.
ANNE LONGFIELD: But if we want to reintroduce
ANNE LONGFIELD: a system of support that can be a system
ANNE LONGFIELD: that responds to need at the point needed,
ANNE LONGFIELD: then those are all elements that I think
ANNE LONGFIELD: are required as part of that build-back.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Just in terms of the strengthening of
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: the workforce and, you know,
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: particularly thinking from my
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: perspective as a qualified social
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: worker. What do you think we could do
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: to ensure that, in terms of
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: building that much more resilient
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: and purposeful support from birth to
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: adulthood, what do you think we could
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: do, what would help to strengthen
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: that workforce? Because they're often
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: doing the most critical work and
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: they're not very well paid, the tools
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: might not be... you know, I just
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: wondered what your thoughts might be
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: on that.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Absolutely. So I think at the moment, as
ANNE LONGFIELD: you say, we've got a lot of very skilled
ANNE LONGFIELD: people who would delivering really vital
ANNE LONGFIELD: work that can be make or break for
ANNE LONGFIELD: children and their families.
ANNE LONGFIELD: But often they're doing it
ANNE LONGFIELD: without the recognition of the system
ANNE LONGFIELD: properly or without the
ANNE LONGFIELD: professional kind of wrapping that you
ANNE LONGFIELD: might expect for something that important,
ANNE LONGFIELD: or indeed the salary within that.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And there isn't a clear pathway
ANNE LONGFIELD: in. There isn't a clear packaging,
ANNE LONGFIELD: if you like, of the range of workforce
ANNE LONGFIELD: roles that are working in this
ANNE LONGFIELD: area. That sounds a little bit convoluted,
ANNE LONGFIELD: but as an example: so when you look at
ANNE LONGFIELD: young people, when you've got some people
ANNE LONGFIELD: who are doing brilliant work in pastoral
ANNE LONGFIELD: care in schools, you've got some that are
ANNE LONGFIELD: working in the community as youth workers
ANNE LONGFIELD: or indeed in schools, and that's great.
ANNE LONGFIELD: You've got some people who are working as
ANNE LONGFIELD: part of youth offending teams, doing vital
ANNE LONGFIELD: work. You've got some people who are
ANNE LONGFIELD: doing the kind of supportive work around
ANNE LONGFIELD: families, again, that is really important.
ANNE LONGFIELD: What you don't have is any way
ANNE LONGFIELD: of bringing all of those interventions
ANNE LONGFIELD: together into a recognised
ANNE LONGFIELD: group of professions or professionals
ANNE LONGFIELD: that can have the
ANNE LONGFIELD: recognition and status needed about the
ANNE LONGFIELD: importance of that work.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Now, I think, if you went back 10 or
ANNE LONGFIELD: 15 years, there were pathways towards
ANNE LONGFIELD: that: a more coherent workforce strategy
ANNE LONGFIELD: for those working with children; a more
ANNE LONGFIELD: developed pathway and climbing frame
ANNE LONGFIELD: between different elements of the
ANNE LONGFIELD: professions; a more established
ANNE LONGFIELD: understanding that actually pastoral care
ANNE LONGFIELD: and support in a slightly less
ANNE LONGFIELD: formal way than maybe social work had
ANNE LONGFIELD: huge value and a connection into that.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Those, I think, have fallen away somewhat
ANNE LONGFIELD: in the stresses and strains and challenges
ANNE LONGFIELD: of those services being under huge
ANNE LONGFIELD: pressure themselves, and a rising
ANNE LONGFIELD: threshold for support often driven
ANNE LONGFIELD: by cost challenges and the like.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And those have obviously driven a lot of
ANNE LONGFIELD: those services towards the high end of
ANNE LONGFIELD: acute response and acute need and crisis.
ANNE LONGFIELD: I think it is established and everyone
ANNE LONGFIELD: knows that if we're really going to get to
ANNE LONGFIELD: the point where we're able to prevent some
ANNE LONGFIELD: of these things developing, we are going
ANNE LONGFIELD: to have to work earlier in the process.
ANNE LONGFIELD: We are going to have to provide that
ANNE LONGFIELD: broader early intervention preventative
ANNE LONGFIELD: work that gets alongside kids and gets
ANNE LONGFIELD: alongside families again.
ANNE LONGFIELD: That will need some more investment in
ANNE LONGFIELD: that area. But we all know that investment
ANNE LONGFIELD: in that area is just a fraction of the
ANNE LONGFIELD: cost of what crises costs in the end.
ANNE LONGFIELD: So there's work to be done there.
ANNE LONGFIELD: There's a job to be done there.
ANNE LONGFIELD: One of the things that I've been involved
ANNE LONGFIELD: in over recent months is discussions
ANNE LONGFIELD: about how we can build a pathway
ANNE LONGFIELD: to qualification for a group of youth
ANNE LONGFIELD: workers that potentially are working
ANNE LONGFIELD: alongside social workers in quite a
ANNE LONGFIELD: diagnostic way.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Bring in, of course, all the youth work
ANNE LONGFIELD: principles and approaches to that work
ANNE LONGFIELD: with young people, but also do it in a way
ANNE LONGFIELD: that can be part of and complement that
ANNE LONGFIELD: wider social care reach and approach.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And I think there's an area there
ANNE LONGFIELD: that we need to build and concentrate on
ANNE LONGFIELD: in coming months and years.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: I've picked up about intervening in,
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: you know, much earlier upstream and
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: strengthening the workforce.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: I was just curious — because it also
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: took me back to the book — you give
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: so many great examples of where
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: there is positive work going on.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: So I don't want to give the impression that
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: it's not.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: So I just wondered, was there
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: anything in particular that stood
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: out, a particular project or...?
ANNE LONGFIELD: Yeah, I guess my starting point in all
ANNE LONGFIELD: this is that it doesn't have to be like
ANNE LONGFIELD: this.
ANNE LONGFIELD: There are fantastic example where either
ANNE LONGFIELD: brilliant individuals or great projects
ANNE LONGFIELD: are managing to show that it is possible
ANNE LONGFIELD: to deliver things in a different way.
ANNE LONGFIELD: But often, especially with local
ANNE LONGFIELD: organisations, you know, they're living on
ANNE LONGFIELD: short-term funding, they're living on not
ANNE LONGFIELD: enough funding.
ANNE LONGFIELD: It's relying on a small team
ANNE LONGFIELD: or one individual that's making all that
ANNE LONGFIELD: difference, there's no way the capacity to
ANNE LONGFIELD: make this mainstream and make this normal.
ANNE LONGFIELD: So my hope is that in
ANNE LONGFIELD: the future we notice that sort of thing
ANNE LONGFIELD: when it's not happening, rather than we
ANNE LONGFIELD: notice it when it is happening, because
ANNE LONGFIELD: hopefully it becomes part of the way
ANNE LONGFIELD: we do things. But some of the inspiration,
ANNE LONGFIELD: well, I mean thinking about schools:
ANNE LONGFIELD: I talk in the book a lot about the
ANNE LONGFIELD: challenge to the education system to be
ANNE LONGFIELD: inclusive, to work very hard to
ANNE LONGFIELD: keep children in school, to support
ANNE LONGFIELD: young people when there are signs that
ANNE LONGFIELD: they might be at risk of exclusion.
ANNE LONGFIELD: There are some great examples of schools.
ANNE LONGFIELD: There's a school in South London
ANNE LONGFIELD: next to the Old Kent Road — it's is a primary
ANNE LONGFIELD: school actually — called Surrey Square,
ANNE LONGFIELD: that has food banks, that has
ANNE LONGFIELD: clothes banks, that has really developed
ANNE LONGFIELD: work with parents.
ANNE LONGFIELD: There's been a family worker there for a
ANNE LONGFIELD: long time. They do deep work
ANNE LONGFIELD: to understand the needs of children and
ANNE LONGFIELD: families in the area.
ANNE LONGFIELD: They even go along to the local council
ANNE LONGFIELD: and the housing department with families
ANNE LONGFIELD: to help them argue their case for
ANNE LONGFIELD: better housing or some housing
ANNE LONGFIELD: in some awful cases.
ANNE LONGFIELD: You walk into that school, you know it's
ANNE LONGFIELD: about the community. You know it's about
ANNE LONGFIELD: them sticking by that community and doing
ANNE LONGFIELD: everything they can as an anchor
ANNE LONGFIELD: organisation in the community.
ANNE LONGFIELD: A great example... Well, there's some
ANNE LONGFIELD: fantastic examples of work going on in
ANNE LONGFIELD: A&E, in some of the most awful
ANNE LONGFIELD: situations. Redthread's work with girls,
ANNE LONGFIELD: really inspiring work in some A&Es, again
ANNE LONGFIELD: where they build relationships with
ANNE LONGFIELD: young people over time and really
ANNE LONGFIELD: help support those young people to a
ANNE LONGFIELD: different place.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Football Beyond Borders, working with
ANNE LONGFIELD: children in schools — young people in
ANNE LONGFIELD: schools at risk of exclusion.
ANNE LONGFIELD: 97% success rate of keeping them in
ANNE LONGFIELD: schools when they do that.
ANNE LONGFIELD: You look around the country, all over
ANNE LONGFIELD: there are individual projects and schools
ANNE LONGFIELD: doing fantastic things.
ANNE LONGFIELD: But every one of those is working
ANNE LONGFIELD: probably against all odds because
ANNE LONGFIELD: they're working without the support or
ANNE LONGFIELD: recognition they need.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Imagine— I come away from every one of
ANNE LONGFIELD: those just saying, 'imagine if we have
ANNE LONGFIELD: this everywhere'. And it is within the
ANNE LONGFIELD: range of possibilities to have those kind
ANNE LONGFIELD: of approaches and those things everywhere.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Hence, the book makes the case for why we
ANNE LONGFIELD: should.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Thank you. I could see, I mean, the audience
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: won't see this, but I can see how much
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: that lit you up describing those
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: initiatives.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: That's such great work that does take
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: place under the most difficult and
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: pressing of circumstances.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Let me just move on a bit more.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: One of the things that that struck me
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: when reading the book was that a lot
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: about what you talk about refers to
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: boys, and particularly boys from
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: minoritised communities.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Just curious to know whether that was
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: a conscious decision or borne out by
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: the research process that you
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: undertook to write the book?
ANNE LONGFIELD: I think the answer to that is both.
ANNE LONGFIELD: We knew from the evidence that already
ANNE LONGFIELD: existed. You look at any of the evidence,
ANNE LONGFIELD: and the huge disproportionality
ANNE LONGFIELD: of involvement of especially
ANNE LONGFIELD: Black boys in so many of the aspects that
ANNE LONGFIELD: we were talking about is just very clear
ANNE LONGFIELD: to see. We'd also taken great attention of
ANNE LONGFIELD: David Lammy's work around
ANNE LONGFIELD: disproportionality in the criminal justice
ANNE LONGFIELD: system. So many messages there that we
ANNE LONGFIELD: were very, very aware of.
ANNE LONGFIELD: But again, you don't
ANNE LONGFIELD: have to look for long at the statistics
ANNE LONGFIELD: that you find out or the conversations you
ANNE LONGFIELD: have to know that
ANNE LONGFIELD: this is something which is in plain sight.
ANNE LONGFIELD: There is huge disproportionality here
ANNE LONGFIELD: which leads you to then ask, well, at what
ANNE LONGFIELD: point do we then recognise
ANNE LONGFIELD: and understand that the systems we have
ANNE LONGFIELD: aren't working for these kids?
ANNE LONGFIELD: Often they're working against them.
ANNE LONGFIELD: And why aren't the signs — whether you
ANNE LONGFIELD: wanted to call it racial bias
ANNE LONGFIELD: or whatever within the system — why aren't
ANNE LONGFIELD: we more alert to this and why aren't we
ANNE LONGFIELD: doing something about this?
ANNE LONGFIELD: So if you look at children in care,
ANNE LONGFIELD: if you look at children who are being
ANNE LONGFIELD: excluded from school, if you look at
ANNE LONGFIELD: children in YOIs (Young Offender Institutions), if
ANNE LONGFIELD: you look at young people who are
ANNE LONGFIELD: part of the wider justice system, you
ANNE LONGFIELD: can see there's an enormous
ANNE LONGFIELD: disproportionality of boys in
ANNE LONGFIELD: the system and Black boys as well.
ANNE LONGFIELD: So that's a major theme throughout
ANNE LONGFIELD: the book and one that we believe, and I
ANNE LONGFIELD: believe, needs huge attention.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: We're nearly at the end of our time.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: But just to conclude, if you could do
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: three things to improve the lot for
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: children, what would you do and why?
ANNE LONGFIELD: Well, I mean, the big thing
ANNE LONGFIELD: is really to
ANNE LONGFIELD: persuade our society, our government,
ANNE LONGFIELD: that actually, as a country,
ANNE LONGFIELD: we have choices that we can make
ANNE LONGFIELD: about how we value children.
ANNE LONGFIELD: If you look at some Scandinavian
ANNE LONGFIELD: countries, decades ago they decided that
ANNE LONGFIELD: children were an important part of our
ANNE LONGFIELD: population, that if we helped children
ANNE LONGFIELD: thrive, then actually we stand the chance
ANNE LONGFIELD: of helping our society thrive, which
ANNE LONGFIELD: has, of course, benefits not only for
ANNE LONGFIELD: those children, but in terms of social
ANNE LONGFIELD: issues and in terms of the economy,
ANNE LONGFIELD: because we all want an economy that's
ANNE LONGFIELD: going to be active and productive and all
ANNE LONGFIELD: the rest of it.
ANNE LONGFIELD: We haven't almost dared to go there.
ANNE LONGFIELD: That feels far too interventionist.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Well, I think, during
ANNE LONGFIELD: the pandemic, our support systems for
ANNE LONGFIELD: children were given a good test and I
ANNE LONGFIELD: don't think they fared very well.
ANNE LONGFIELD: So I think there's a moment
ANNE LONGFIELD: here where we can look to recommit
ANNE LONGFIELD: ourselves to kids in a way that says
ANNE LONGFIELD: as a nation, we think they're important.
ANNE LONGFIELD: We need to put them first. Next to that is
ANNE LONGFIELD: that when you do that, you think
ANNE LONGFIELD: about children when you're thinking about
ANNE LONGFIELD: your neighbourhood; the space that's
ANNE LONGFIELD: taken up for children or given to
ANNE LONGFIELD: children; the facilities that are there
ANNE LONGFIELD: that are safe for children; the way we
ANNE LONGFIELD: design our homes, especially social
ANNE LONGFIELD: housing; the way that we design our parks,
ANNE LONGFIELD: the way that we design our roads or
ANNE LONGFIELD: non-roads, our public space, essentially.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Imagine if we designed our area, our
ANNE LONGFIELD: planning for public space in a way that
ANNE LONGFIELD: was child-friendly.
ANNE LONGFIELD: I would love us to consider
ANNE LONGFIELD: and put high on the list — and require
ANNE LONGFIELD: even — children's needs to be built into
ANNE LONGFIELD: all of the way that we design our country
ANNE LONGFIELD: and the way it's established.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Let's put forward places where children
ANNE LONGFIELD: can safely play, be with each other,
ANNE LONGFIELD: be children, enjoy childhood safely.
ANNE LONGFIELD: The third is really to have
ANNE LONGFIELD: an overriding commitment with the engine
ANNE LONGFIELD: of government behind it to give all
ANNE LONGFIELD: our kids the best chance possible and be
ANNE LONGFIELD: ambitious for all our kids for
ANNE LONGFIELD: a positive childhood and a positive
ANNE LONGFIELD: scenario in terms of of our adult life.
ANNE LONGFIELD: We know that childhood and experience
ANNE LONGFIELD: of childhood sticks with you for life,
ANNE LONGFIELD: good or bad.
ANNE LONGFIELD: We have choices about the way we help
ANNE LONGFIELD: children thrive as children and help
ANNE LONGFIELD: them get that best start into life.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: That's fantastic. It's fantastic.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: And I just love that idea, that sense
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: of, in a way, quite revolutionary
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: perspective and ambition that we have
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: for children which has come through
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: there. And I love that idea about the
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: design and the lens; let's look at
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: the way we live through that
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: perspective.
ANNE LONGFIELD: It's about being ambitious.
ANNE LONGFIELD: It's about, you know, valuing young lives,
ANNE LONGFIELD: but also being ambitious for what we could
ANNE LONGFIELD: do for those children, but also for what
ANNE LONGFIELD: we want for our country. Why can't our
ANNE LONGFIELD: country be the best place to grow up?
ANNE LONGFIELD: We could make it so, and obviously, in my
ANNE LONGFIELD: view, we should.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: What a great place to stop.
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: I'd just like to thank you so much
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: for for talking about 'Young Lives,
WESLEY POWLEY-BAKER: Big Ambitions'.
ANNE LONGFIELD: Thanks very much.
OUTRO: Thanks for listening to this NSPCC Learning
OUTRO: Podcast.
OUTRO: At the time of recording, this episode's content
OUTRO: was up to date, but the world of safeguarding and
OUTRO: child protection is ever-changing.
OUTRO: So if you're looking for the most current
OUTRO: safeguarding and child protection training,
OUTRO: information or resources, please visit
OUTRO: our website for professionals at
OUTRO: nspcc.org.uk/learning.
We recommend upgrading to the latest Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
Please check your internet connection and refresh the page. You might also try disabling any ad blockers.
You can visit our support center if you're having problems.