Night courts - reportedly to be shelved as costly and unworkable - are the latest in a long line of "eye-catching" government initiatives designed to combat youth crime.
Tony Blair first pledged a crackdown on "yob culture" at the 1994 Labour Party conference, promising a "voluntary national taskforce of young people given constructive tasks to do".
Here is a brief rundown of Labour's attempts to crackdown on anti-social behaviour since coming to power in 1997:
October 1997:
- Anti-Social Behaviour Orders proposed to prevent youngsters terrorising neighbourhoods. Later condemned by local authorities as too complex and time consuming.
- Child curfew orders to give councils the power to ban unsupervised children from specified areas. Opposition later claims none have been used
- Parenting orders requiring parents of offenders to attend special classes
- Reparation orders requiring young offenders to make amends for their crime and confront their victims
May 1998:- In an article for the News of the World, Mr Blair highlights the link between truancy and crime and floats a series of new proposals
- These include obliging parents of truants to carry pagers so they can be warned of their children go missing
- They also include giving courts the power to force parents to escort their children to school
December 1998:- David Blunkett unveils �500m package over three years to combat truancy
- Plans include computerised school registers so truants can be more easily identified
September 1999:- Jack Straw announces �50m plan to cut youth offending in England and Wales
June 2000:- Tony Blair announces that people who are drunk and disorderly will face on-the-spot fines, raising the prospect of police officers marching yobs to cash points
July 2000:- On-the-spot fines idea dropped after police chiefs dismiss it as 'unworkable'. Fixed penalty fines - administered in a similar way to parking fines - are touted by Downing Street as an alternative.
September 2000:- 24-hour courts administering instant justice proposed for major cities
November 2000:- Jack Straw announces child curfew orders enforced by electronic tagging to be extended to under 16-year-olds
August 2001:- Curfew legislation extended, allowing children up to the age of 15 to be banned from the streets between certain hours
January 2002:
- The Metropolitan Police announce proposals to create a database of potential young criminals. Civil libertarians oppose the proposal
February 2002:- Home Secretary David Blunkett announces juveniles on bail can be tagged, in an attempt to crack down on persistent young criminals
March 2002: - Parenting orders are extended
April 2002:- For the first time, all persistent offenders, not just those accused of violent crime, can be held on remand while awaiting trial
- Parents of children who truant face losing child benefit
November 2002:- Anti-social behaviour bill included in Queen's speech
- Plans include making it easier to evict anti-social tenants
- Plans also include extending the use of fixed penalty notices and increasing the number of people enforcing them
- There are also proposed new measures to tackle graffiti, use of spray paints, fly-tipping, vandalism and dangerous use of airguns, fireworks and other anti-social behaviour
December 2002:- Report by Lord Chancellor's department suggests night courts are costly and unworkable