During the past 20 years, there have been several initiatives, led by the British government, to improve crime prevention by informing policy and practice with research. Two in particular stand out for the scale of the investment: The first was the establishment of the Crime Reduction Programme (CRP) in 1999. The CRP was supposed both to be based on what was already known from research and also to improve the evidence base and was scheduled to run for a decade. The CRP involved an unprecedented financial commitment to improving the knowledge base of crime prevention. The second was the establishment of the What Works Centre for Crime Reduction (WWCCR) in 2013. The WWCCR attempts both to distil findings from high quality research on what wor...
The success of any policy is measured by how it is implemented and its effect. Given this, the imple...
Crime data analysis and the identification of crime ‘hotspots’ are now commonplace in police forces ...
This paper consists of three parts. First we focus on four theoretical perspectives of crime reducti...
This paper focuses on descriptions of crime prevention projects identified as ‘good practice’, and h...
This chapter traces and evaluates both the historic emergence of the modern ‘preventive turn’ as wel...
This paper, in the only long-standing academic series covering situational crime prevention, initiat...
The evidence base review for the Crime Domain examined some of the leading theories used to explain...
To support the development and implementation of evidence-based crime reduction, we systematically i...
The Beccaria-Center project 'Professional Training in Crime Prevention' was implemented by the Crime...
Ignoring the need for prevention can store up big problems for the future, whether the issue is heal...
The article contrasts the original vision behind the Crime Reduction Programme - an ambitious plan (...
A critical reflective reassessment of key developments in community safety and crime prevention thin...
The What Works Centre for Crime Reduction (WWCCR) in the UK’s College of Policing has a key role in ...
Since the 1990s there has been an upsurge in policy-related research that aims to identify ‘what wor...
This article contributes to a growing body of research on the police reforms in Scotland. It examine...
The success of any policy is measured by how it is implemented and its effect. Given this, the imple...
Crime data analysis and the identification of crime ‘hotspots’ are now commonplace in police forces ...
This paper consists of three parts. First we focus on four theoretical perspectives of crime reducti...
This paper focuses on descriptions of crime prevention projects identified as ‘good practice’, and h...
This chapter traces and evaluates both the historic emergence of the modern ‘preventive turn’ as wel...
This paper, in the only long-standing academic series covering situational crime prevention, initiat...
The evidence base review for the Crime Domain examined some of the leading theories used to explain...
To support the development and implementation of evidence-based crime reduction, we systematically i...
The Beccaria-Center project 'Professional Training in Crime Prevention' was implemented by the Crime...
Ignoring the need for prevention can store up big problems for the future, whether the issue is heal...
The article contrasts the original vision behind the Crime Reduction Programme - an ambitious plan (...
A critical reflective reassessment of key developments in community safety and crime prevention thin...
The What Works Centre for Crime Reduction (WWCCR) in the UK’s College of Policing has a key role in ...
Since the 1990s there has been an upsurge in policy-related research that aims to identify ‘what wor...
This article contributes to a growing body of research on the police reforms in Scotland. It examine...
The success of any policy is measured by how it is implemented and its effect. Given this, the imple...
Crime data analysis and the identification of crime ‘hotspots’ are now commonplace in police forces ...
This paper consists of three parts. First we focus on four theoretical perspectives of crime reducti...