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Seen and Heard: Reclaiming the public realm with children and young people launched
Government called to re-think towns and cities as think tank asks, where have all the children gone?
Children are segregated out of our public spaces and excluded from the community itself, warns Demos. The study, based on investigations of public areas and interviews with children across England, finds public spaces that are actively antisocial to children and built around the convenience of the car and the shopping trip.
Seen and Heard: Reclaiming the public realm with children and young people, recommends some radical changes, for example at 20mph speed limit where streets are shared with children and creating iconic play spaces at high profile locations. The report urges adults not to be so hung up on kids hanging around, underlining the importance of unstructured play and socialisation in growing up.
Beverely Hughes MP, the Children’s Minister, and Lord Richard Rogers will be speaking at the launch at the Cut Bar of the Young Vic Theatre, SE1 8LZ. The event starts at 8:45 for 9:00am.
Co-author Celia Hannon from Demos said:
“With cars outnumbering children by three to one, the acceleration of house building, and the privatisation of public space, places once used by young people for playing and exploring rites of childhood are quickly being swallowed up.
“Unless young people are in structured activities or acting as mini consumers, we assume that they are causing trouble. Our streets, squares and parks need to be accessible and enjoyable for all, otherwise existing anxiety around anti-social behaviour will get worse. Its time to open up our towns and cities for all and make them more playful. Children should be seen and heard”
Adrian Voce, Director of Play England, who commissioned the work, said:
“This report addresses one of the most serious challenges we face as a society: the disappearance of children and young people from public space. The consequence is a decline in their opportunities for play, recreation and their own social and cultural lives other than through electronic media or highly structured activities. Demos's proposals, all intended to help reclaim young citizens' rightful stake in the public realm, are welcome and demand a positive, robust and urgent response from all levels of government and from society at large.”
Based on nine months of in-depth interviews with young people, professionals and policy makers in six areas of the UK, the report commisioned by Play England and funded by the Big Lottery Fund’s Children Play Initiative, surveys a vandalised park with run-down play areas and nothing for young people to do, an estate where the car takes precendence over children and a town centre where the ‘shared’ space is not shared with young people. Seen and Heard: Reclaiming the public realm with children and young people aims to start a national debate on the room we leave for childhood in our public spaces and has specific proposals for the Government to:
- Appoint youth planners to ‘youth proof’ development proposals and audit public places to identify areas in need of investment
- Introduce an anti-social behaviour hotline so that young people can report adults who are threatening their right to be outside and in public spaces
- Open up areas dominated by the car by introducing 20mph speed limits across residential streets
- Create iconic play spaces at high profile locations to challenge expectations of where play can take place
- Encourage innovation with neighbourhood play toolkits, local budgeting and by transferring assets to the community
- Use ‘intermediaries’ such as youth workers and teachers to solve conflicts between young people and adults
- Arrange job swaps between architects, police, landscape designers and town centre managers so they understand how their work affects young people
ENDS
CONTACT
Contact: William Higham, Demos, 020 7367 6325, 07939 228255. william.higham@demos.co.uk. Interviews and full copies of the embargoed report available by request.
To RSVP for the event, email: seenandheard@demos.co.uk.
