To read this content please select one of the options below:

The first stage of an exploratory study into the UK fire and rescue services working with children and young people who set fires

Joanna Foster (Joanna Foster is the Managing Director, fabtic, London, UK)

Journal of Criminological Research, Policy and Practice

ISSN: 2056-3841

Article publication date: 28 June 2022

Issue publication date: 10 August 2022

145

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to outline the first stages of an exploratory study into how the UK fire and rescue services (FRSs) identify those children and young people who require psychosocial interventions to address their firesetting behaviour.

Design/methodology/approach

A purposive sample (N = 53) representing all the UK FRSs was recruited. Participants completed an online survey to establish the type of firesetting intervention provided, if any; the training and policies available to staff who identify those clients requiring psychosocial interventions and what influences this decision-making.

Findings

Decision-making on how to identify clients requiring psychosocial interventions was dominated by professional judgement informed by practitioner training and experience alone, which is subject to human error and bias. Some staff undertaking this risk-critical work have no access to training and/or written guidance to assist their decision-making. Nearly 30% of participants (N = 14) deemed national firesetting policy as not useful in identifying the type of firesetting intervention needed. The development of a risk assessment tool, training and national written guidance were considered the three main ways staff could be helped in identifying those clients requiring psychosocial interventions.

Practical implications

The implications are as follows: the development of a risk assessment tool for fire and rescue service staff working with children and young people who set fires, a requirement for all fire and rescue staff working with children and young people who set fires to receive mandatory training in this specialist field of work, all FRSs to offer firesetting intervention services to children and young people, all FRSs to have written firesetting policies that assist staff in their identification of firesetting risk and national firesetting guidance for FRSs that assists staff in their identification of firesetting risk and the tenets of defensible decision-making.

Originality/value

To the best of the author’s knowledge, this is the first study to look at how the UK FRSs identify those children and young people requiring psychosocial interventions to address their firesetting behaviour. The 100% completion rate to the online survey suggests the findings are generalisable across all the UK FRSs, providing the FRS professional body with an opportunity to instigate the changes their frontline practitioners and managers have identified.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

My sincerest thanks to Dr Lucy Willmott and Dr Faye Horsley for their guidance when writing this article. I remain ever grateful to the fire and rescue service practitioners across the UK who made this study possible through their engagement and support. May they be heard, seen and recognised in the risk-critical work they do.Funding: This study was supported by a research grant from Homerton College, University of Cambridge.

Citation

Foster, J. (2022), "The first stage of an exploratory study into the UK fire and rescue services working with children and young people who set fires", Journal of Criminological Research, Policy and Practice, Vol. 8 No. 3, pp. 209-224. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCRPP-06-2021-0035

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles