At the Musically Unorthodox Conference 2025, Rachel Long, Programme Manager for the Northamptonshire Serious Violence Prevention Partnership, delivered a presentation that reframed how we understand youth violence, not as isolated criminal behaviour, but as a predictable outcome of systemic failure.
Her message was clear: We intervene too late, and the data proves it. “We usually do the work when the child’s behaviour has escalated, or they’ve been excluded from school, or they’re already in the system,” Long told the room. “That’s when they get support. We need to be in primary schools, in communities, with families years before that point.”
Here are the key statistics and insights from her presentation.
When the Northamptonshire Serious Violence Prevention Partnership launched two years ago, it did something unprecedented: it brought together data from police, fire, local authorities, probation, youth services, healthcare, education, and prisons.
This multi-agency dataset, analysed by the Observatory and OWL analysis allowed them to profile the top 350 perpetrators of serious violence in the region.
The result?
That increase isn’t failure. It’s clarity.
“We could look at that person’s childhood,” Long explained. “We could see the gaps the moments before behaviour escalates into a serious violence offence.”
The partnership’s mandate is to reduce serious violence in the long term. But Long was emphatic: you cannot reduce what you do not understand.
“We need to understand the causes of serious violence. It’s not the behaviour, it’s the root cause.”
This distinction is critical. A young person carrying a weapon or involved in exploitation is not the problem; they are a symptom of problems that began years earlier: exclusion, undiagnosed trauma, family instability, poverty.
Yet the system still operates reactively.
Long presented a stark reality: most funding and intervention is triggered after a child has already been excluded, arrested, or labelled.
Her partnership is trying to reverse that.
Primary prevention, intervening before behaviour escalates is now the strategic focus. This means:
“That’s where our funding is mostly aimed now,” Long said. “Not waiting for the crisis. Stopping it before it starts.”
Long shared three examples of programmes the partnership has funded, each chosen because the data showed a specific gap:
“We ask Athletic Elite to go into those schools,” Long said. “We don’t wait for the referral. We go to where the data tells us the risk is.”
Perhaps the most telling statistic was not a number, but a methodology gap.
“We found it was important to actually listen to young people. Rather than professionals dictating what we think is needed, we need to hear what young people and communities are saying.”
The partnership now funds Young Ambassadors, a direct channel for youth voice into strategy and funding decisions.
It is a simple shift with radical implications: treating young people as experts in their own lives.
Rachel Long’s presentation was not about music. But for a room full of youth music organisations, talent development programmes, and educators, the implications were immediate.
Music interventions work. The Compounds is not a pilot; it is a funded, data-backed strategy. It exists because the evidence showed that creative engagement reaches young people that traditional services miss.
But Long’s data also challenges us:
The Northamptonshire Serious Violence Prevention Partnership is still young. Two years in, it has moved from 19 recommendations to 29, not because violence is increasing, but because understanding is deepening.
“I have the strategy,” Long concluded. “It’s 39 pages of documents and stats. But what it really says is this: we need to be earlier, we need to be in communities, and we need to listen.”
For anyone working with young people at the margins, that is not just a policy objective. It is a call to action.
PLATFORM
musicallyunorthodox.com
PROGRAMMES
mucm.inmusicinmedia.com
SOCIAL VALUE
socialvalue.inmusicinmedia.com
Email: [email protected]
Tel: +44 (0) 7762 545 275