Vulnerable people with mental health problems are being sent to prison for breaching Anti-Social Behaviour Injunctions (ASBIs) imposed for feeding pigeons, street begging and playing dominoes in public, according to an investigation by The Bureau of Investigative Journalism.

The work, funded by TLEF, was prompted by the lack of accessible information provided by the Home Office, Ministry of Justice or HM Courts & Tribunals Service about the impact of ASBIs in the civil courts.

The investigation comes two years after a report by the Civil Justice Council found that ASBIs were “not working” and that “as a matter of urgency” data should be collected and made available “in order to assess the use and efficacy of orders”.

This underscored the findings of an earlier report by the Council  also published in 2020, which called for urgent action to improve the data on vulnerable users in the civil courts

The Government has not responded publicly to either report.

Commenting on the TBIJ investigation, TLEF’s Director of Research Dr Natalie Byrom said:

“This investigation reveals the weakness of current arrangements for dealing with anti-social behaviour, and the risks they pose to very vulnerable people. It also further highlights the ‘data desert’ across our civil courts.

“It is now more than two years since two reports urged the Government to provide more data about ASBIs and improve information on vulnerable parties in civil cases. Yet since then, there has been next to nothing in response.

“This lack of action is reflective of a wider failure to invest in effective data collection and governance across our courts and tribunals service. Without such investment we will continue to struggle to improve the impact and effectiveness of the justice system.”

You can read the full investigation here. 

Related Posts

The new public repository of judgments is a triumph for open justice- but there is more to do

TLEF’s Director of Research, Dr Natalie Byrom explains why last week’s announcement is such a significant step and calls on the Ministry of Justice to make good on its commitment to develop a complete record of judgments and decisions. Alex Kelly was just 15 years old when he was found hanging in his cell at […]

The new public repository of judgments is a triumph for open justice- but there is more to do

Making sense of ‘Justice System Data’: a new report

A guest blog for The Legal Education Foundation by report authors Dr. Judith Townend and Dr Cassandra Wiener It’s perhaps because the roots of ‘open justice’ run so deep that the data and information generated by our justice system is so messy. The system that produces, stores and shares that data is not something neatly […]

Making sense of ‘Justice System Data’: a new report

© 2013 - 2024 The Legal Education Foundation
Registered charity 271297 (England/Wales)