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BIP launches Youth Intervention Project at Crumlin Road Gaol

 

This initiative was created to move away from crisis management of youth led interface violence to a co-ordinated approach to developing strategic interventions. It will build positive sustainable interface relationships to utilise local knowledge and expertise to develop a collaborative and integrated approach to youth provision. The project will contribute to preventing the outbreak of interface violence in the future and thereby help to ensure that the past is not repeated

The project is at the early stages of development but the first four partnerships are currently set up and thus we wanted to launch the programme in a way that would attract the young people who will be involved.

We held the launch in Belfast’s Crumlin Road Gaol, which dates back to 1845 and closed its doors as a working prison in 1996. After extensive renovations the gaol has re-opened as a visitor attraction and conference centre. The Gaol has a long and varied past from when women and children were held within its walls through to the political segregation of republican and loyalist prisoners during the ‘Troubles’. The setting was stark as we held the launch in the circle, off which are the four wings of the Gaol. We sat in a cold, large circle surrounded by bars and four long eerie corridors filled with small cells and a prevailing sense of sad history.

Into this room crammed 90 young people and community workers from the first four clusters: Donegall Pass/Markets/Lower Ormeau, Inner East/Short Strand, Ardoyne/Woodvale and Mid-Falls/Shankill, along with some statutory representatives from NOHE, BELB and Pauline Perry from our funders, Pobal. The guest speaker was Rory Best, Ulster and Irish Rugby International, who was interviewed by Trevor Ringland, a former Ulster and Irish Rugby international and spoke about the use of sport in youth intervention settings. This was followed by everyone embarking on a tour of C-Wing to see the 'hanging cell' and the conditions under which inmates served their sentences.

It was not lost on all of those taking part in the official launch of the Youth Intervention Project that, while the newly renovated Crumlin Road Gaol provided an excellent setting for the event, it was a time and a place ‘historically’ that no one wanted to revisit especially our young people.

Our thanks go out to all who helped make the event so special, including our speakers Rory and Trevor, the youth and community workers and all the young people who came along on the night, and the staff at Crumlin Road Gaol.

For more information about the Youth Intervention Project, click here.

BIP's latest publication 'Belfast Interfaces' launched at City Hall

Belfast Interface Project's latest publication, 'Belfast Interfaces: Security Barriers and Defensive Use of Space' was successfully launched on Friday 20th January 2012 in the Lord Mayor's Parlour, Belfast CIty Hall. Justice Minister, David Ford MLA was the key note speaker for the event, along with Joe O'Donnell, BIP and Neil Jarman, ICR, and the launch was hosted by the former Lord Mayor of Belfast, Councillor Niall Ó Donnghaile and well attended by BIP members and key stakeholders.

This new research was commissioned by Belfast Interface Project and identifies and classifies the known security barriers and associated forms of defensive architecture in residential areas of Belfast.

Click here for a link to the 'Belfast Interfaces' publication.

 

BIP partner with Peace Players in Interface Games

In the summer of 2012, BIP partnered with Peace Players Intl to signpost young people to take part in the interface games.

Click on the link below to read the full article:

'Pitch Battles with Peace as the only Goal'

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