MAPPA: Difference between revisions

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Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements.
{{Information-header}}
Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements are a means of sharing information, and assessing and managing risk, between the police, prison and probation services. Social services and NHS Trusts, amongst others, must co-operate with these bodies so far as is compatible with their own functions.
 
==Extract from MAPPA website==
Introduction from MAPPA website: "MAPPA stands for Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements. It is the process through which the Police, Probation and Prison Services work together with other agencies to manage the risks posed by violent and sexual offenders living in the community in order to protect the public. MAPPA is not a statutory body in itself but is a mechanism through which agencies can better discharge their statutory responsibilities and protect the public in a co-ordinated manner. Agencies at all times retain their full statutory responsibilities and obligations."


==Extract from guidance==
==Extract from guidance==
<i>The purpose of MAPPA is to help to reduce the re-offending behaviour of sexual and violent offenders in order to protect the public, including previous victims, from serious harm. It aims to do this by ensuring that all relevant
The purpose of MAPPA is to help to reduce the re-offending behaviour of sexual and violent offenders in order to protect the public, including previous victims, from serious harm. It aims to do this by ensuring that all relevant
agencies work together effectively to:
agencies work together effectively to:
*Identify all relevant offenders;
*Identify all relevant offenders;
*Complete comprehensive risk assessments that take advantage of coordinated information sharing across the agencies;
*Complete comprehensive risk assessments that take advantage of coordinated information sharing across the agencies;
*Devise, implement and review robust Risk Management Plans; and
*Devise, implement and review robust Risk Management Plans; and
*Focus the available resources in a way which best protects the public from serious harm</i>
*Focus the available resources in a way which best protects the public from serious harm
 
==Categories and levels==
There are three categories of offender:
#Registered sexual offenders.
#Violent and other sexual offenders.
#Other dangerous offenders.
 
There are three levels of MAPPA management:
#Ordinary agency management (for psychiatric patients this means the Care Programme Approach).
#Active multi-agency management.
#Active enhanced multi-agency management.
 
==Mental Health Tribunal==
The Practice Direction on Reports requires social circumstances reports to contain certain information in relation to MAPPA. For in-patients this is:
 
<blockquote>
(r) whether the patient is known to any MAPPA meeting or agency and, if so, in which area, for what reason, and at what level - together with the name of the Chair of any MAPPA meeting concerned with the patient, and the name of the representative of the lead agency;
 
(s) in the event that a MAPPA meeting or agency wishes to put forward evidence of its views in relation to the level and management of risk, a summary of those views (or an Executive Summary may be attached to the report); and where relevant, a copy of the Police National Computer record of previous convictions should be attached.
</blockquote>
 
===Guidance===
* {{rsum|HMPPS, 'MAPPA Guidance' (August 2024)}}
 
* {{rsum|Mental Health Casework Section, 'Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements (MAPPA) and the Restricted Patient System' (February 2021)}}
 
===Report===
*[[:File:Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements Annual Report 2009-10.pdf|Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements Annual Report 2009/10]] and [[:File:Mappa-annual-stats-tables-0910.xls|Statistical tables]] - 'This annual publication presents the number of MAPPA eligible offenders in England and Wales, and information related to these offenders, including a summary of the information provided in the MAPPA reports published by each of the areas.'
 
===Scotland===
*[[:File:Scottish MAPPA annual report 2010-11.pdf|Scottish Government, 'Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements (MAPPA) Annual Report 2010/11' (9/9/11)]]
 
*[[:File:Scottish MAPPA national guidance 2012 v1.pdf|Scottish Government, 'Multi Agency Public Protection Arrangements (MAPPA) National Guidance 2012 Version 1 and Covering Justice and Communities Circular JD/01/2012' (12/1/12)]]
 
===Statistics===
*[[:File:MAPPA annual 2010-11.zip|Ministry of Justice, 'Annual statistics on Multi-agency public protection arrangements (MAPPA) eligible offenders' (16/3/12)]]. Summary: 'This annual publication presents the number of MAPPA eligible offenders in England and Wales, and information related to these offenders, including a summary of the information provided in the MAPPA reports published by each of the areas.'


==External links==
==External links==
[http://www.probation.homeoffice.gov.uk/files/pdf/MAPPA Guidance 2009 Version 3.0.pdf MAPPA Guidance 2009 - version 3.0]
*[https://mappa.justice.gov.uk/connect.ti/MAPPA/groupHome MAPPA website]. Extract from website: "This site provides professionals and the public with information on how sexual and violent offenders are managed in the community."


{{stub}}
===Old dead links===
(Might be useful to replace with Internet Archive links.)
*[https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/multi-agency-public-protection-arrangements-mappa--2 Ministry of Justice, 'MAPPA guidance' (version 4, 2012)]†
*[http://www.justice.gov.uk/news/newsrelease271010a.htm Ministry of Justice, 'MAPPA: open and transparent for greater public protection', press release 27/10/10]
*[http://www.justice.gov.uk/publications/mappa.htm MAPPA reports] - 'Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements annual reports demonstrating accountability to the communities of the 42 regions represented in England and Wales.'


[[Category:Miscellaneous articles]]
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Latest revision as of 20:37, 3 November 2024

Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements are a means of sharing information, and assessing and managing risk, between the police, prison and probation services. Social services and NHS Trusts, amongst others, must co-operate with these bodies so far as is compatible with their own functions.

Extract from MAPPA website

Introduction from MAPPA website: "MAPPA stands for Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements. It is the process through which the Police, Probation and Prison Services work together with other agencies to manage the risks posed by violent and sexual offenders living in the community in order to protect the public. MAPPA is not a statutory body in itself but is a mechanism through which agencies can better discharge their statutory responsibilities and protect the public in a co-ordinated manner. Agencies at all times retain their full statutory responsibilities and obligations."

Extract from guidance

The purpose of MAPPA is to help to reduce the re-offending behaviour of sexual and violent offenders in order to protect the public, including previous victims, from serious harm. It aims to do this by ensuring that all relevant agencies work together effectively to:

  • Identify all relevant offenders;
  • Complete comprehensive risk assessments that take advantage of coordinated information sharing across the agencies;
  • Devise, implement and review robust Risk Management Plans; and
  • Focus the available resources in a way which best protects the public from serious harm

Categories and levels

There are three categories of offender:

  1. Registered sexual offenders.
  2. Violent and other sexual offenders.
  3. Other dangerous offenders.

There are three levels of MAPPA management:

  1. Ordinary agency management (for psychiatric patients this means the Care Programme Approach).
  2. Active multi-agency management.
  3. Active enhanced multi-agency management.

Mental Health Tribunal

The Practice Direction on Reports requires social circumstances reports to contain certain information in relation to MAPPA. For in-patients this is:

(r) whether the patient is known to any MAPPA meeting or agency and, if so, in which area, for what reason, and at what level - together with the name of the Chair of any MAPPA meeting concerned with the patient, and the name of the representative of the lead agency;

(s) in the event that a MAPPA meeting or agency wishes to put forward evidence of its views in relation to the level and management of risk, a summary of those views (or an Executive Summary may be attached to the report); and where relevant, a copy of the Police National Computer record of previous convictions should be attached.

Guidance

Report

Scotland

Statistics

External links

  • MAPPA website. Extract from website: "This site provides professionals and the public with information on how sexual and violent offenders are managed in the community."

Old dead links

(Might be useful to replace with Internet Archive links.)

INFORMATION

  • Representation
  • Civil sections and CTOs
  • Criminal sections
  • Aftercare
  • Mental Health Tribunal
  • Nearest relative
  • Legal Aid
  • Treatment
  • Mental capacity law
MISCELLANEOUS
ELSEWHERE
HISTORICAL
  • Coronavirus
  • Changes made by MHA 2007


What links here: