Tackling anti-social behaviour

Pages in Tackling anti-social behaviour

  1. 1. Report anti-social behaviour
  2. 2. Possible interventions for anti-social behaviour
  3. 3. What you can do about anti-social behaviour
  4. 4. You are here: National anti-social behaviour principles
  5. 5. Community Harm and Risk Management Meetings (CHARMM)

4. National anti-social behaviour principles

During ASB Awareness Week 2022, we pledged our support for the Government's five anti-social behaviour principles:

  1. Victims should be encouraged to report ASB and expect to be taken seriously. They should have clear ways to report, have access to help and support to recover, and be given the opportunity to choose restorative approaches to tackling ASB.
  2. Agencies will have clear and transparent processes to ensure that victims can report ASB concerns, can understand how the matter will be investigated and are kept well informed of progress once a report is made
  3. Agencies and practitioners will work across boundaries to identify, assess and tackle ASB and its underlying causes. Referral pathways should be clearly set out between services and published locally. This includes pathways for the community trigger and health services
  4. The public’s ASB concerns should always be considered both nationally and locally in strategic needs assessments for community safety. Best practice should be shared through a network of ASB experts within each community safety partnership, each policing area and nationally
  5. Adults and children who exhibit ASB should have the opportunity to take responsibility for their behaviour and repair the harm caused by it. Agencies should deliver appropriate interventions, which may include criminal justice options, based on the seriousness, risks and vulnerabilities of the case