This article explores the use of evidence and other varieties of knowledge in police decision-making. It surveys official government policy, demonstrating that evidence-based policy-making is the dominant policy-making paradigm in the United Kingdom. It discusses the limits to social science knowledge in policy-making. The article explores four ideas associated with the notion of ‘experience’: occupational culture; institutional memory; local knowledge, and craft, drawing on data from four UK police forces. We discuss the limits to experiential knowledge and conclude that experience is crucial to evidence-based policing and decision-making because it is the key to weaving the varieties of knowledge together
Whilst Evidence Based Policing (EBP) has emerged as a police approach in Europe, Australasia and the...
This paper provides a contextual understanding of police officer and civilian staff receptivity to r...
There have been calls for research evidence to be drawn into police practice. We examine evidence-ba...
This chapter contributes to the reflection of evidence based practice by providing a case study of t...
This article appeared in the "Ethical Record" the journal of the Conway Hall Ethical Society followi...
This paper argues the current exposition of police knowledge through the discourses of police scienc...
This paper argues the current exposition of police knowledge through the discourses of police scienc...
This paper draws on the work of the Evidence and Insight Team, a dedicated research function based w...
The What Works concept in the UK is a national approach to prioritising the use of evidence in polic...
Purpose The authors consider current policy debates in the UK about the professionalisation of the ...
Police scholars have consistently drawn attention to the importance of informal or cultural knowledg...
We examine transmission of Evidence-Based Policing (EBP) principles through taught classroom session...
Evidence-based policing (EBP) has gained prominence in jurisdictions across the core anglosphere. It...
This thesis examines the rise of evidence-based policing (EBP) in the UK over the last two decades. ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
Whilst Evidence Based Policing (EBP) has emerged as a police approach in Europe, Australasia and the...
This paper provides a contextual understanding of police officer and civilian staff receptivity to r...
There have been calls for research evidence to be drawn into police practice. We examine evidence-ba...
This chapter contributes to the reflection of evidence based practice by providing a case study of t...
This article appeared in the "Ethical Record" the journal of the Conway Hall Ethical Society followi...
This paper argues the current exposition of police knowledge through the discourses of police scienc...
This paper argues the current exposition of police knowledge through the discourses of police scienc...
This paper draws on the work of the Evidence and Insight Team, a dedicated research function based w...
The What Works concept in the UK is a national approach to prioritising the use of evidence in polic...
Purpose The authors consider current policy debates in the UK about the professionalisation of the ...
Police scholars have consistently drawn attention to the importance of informal or cultural knowledg...
We examine transmission of Evidence-Based Policing (EBP) principles through taught classroom session...
Evidence-based policing (EBP) has gained prominence in jurisdictions across the core anglosphere. It...
This thesis examines the rise of evidence-based policing (EBP) in the UK over the last two decades. ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
Whilst Evidence Based Policing (EBP) has emerged as a police approach in Europe, Australasia and the...
This paper provides a contextual understanding of police officer and civilian staff receptivity to r...
There have been calls for research evidence to be drawn into police practice. We examine evidence-ba...