Matthew Radburn, Clifford Stott, Ben Bradford & Mark Robinson Pages 1-18 | Received 26 Apr 2016, Accepted 05 Sep 2016, Published online: 23 Sep 2016
ABSTRACT
Procedural justice theory (PJT) is now a widely utilised theoretical perspective in policing research that acknowledges the centrality of police ‘fairness’. Despite its widespread acceptance this paper asserts that there are conceptual limitations that emerge when applying the theory to the policing of crowd events. This paper contends that this problem with PJT is a result of specific assumptions that are highlighted by two studies using a novel experimental approach. Study 1 systematically manipulated the social categories used to describe crowd participants subjected to police coercion. The experiment demonstrates how these social categories dramatically affected participants’ perceptions of the same police action and that it was participants’ relational identification with the police, rather than a superordinate category, that mediated the association between judgements of procedural fairness and intentions to cooperate. In Study 2, using a quasi-experimental design, we then replicated and extended these findings by demonstrating how perceptions of procedural fairness are also influenced by levels of in-group identification. The paper concludes by exploring the implications of the data for reconceptualising the social psychological processes mediating these judgements and impacts of police legitimacy.
Alain Brechbühl, Annemarie Schumacher Dimech, Olivier N. Schmid & Roland Seiler Pages 1-19 | Published online: 16 Aug 2016 and security
Published online: 16 Aug 2016
Abstract
Despite a large body of literature about fan violence issues, research investigating perceptions and dynamics in potentially violent situations, called critical incidents (CIs), is missing. This qualitative study examined the perceptions and dynamics of CIs involving ultra football fans. Fifty-nine semi-structured interviews with individuals (fans, police officers or security employees) involved in eight CIs were conducted and analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. The assessment of legitimacy of an out-group’s actions strongly influenced the perception of a CI, which is in line with the Elaborated Social Identity Model. Informative intergroup communication about the own intentions seemed to increase perception of legitimacy, while arrests of fans due to pyrotechnics were perceived by fans as illegitimate. The local fan culture, e.g. the fans’ use of pyrotechnics for their support, is relevant for the understanding of this assessment of legitimacy.
Eric L. Piza Pages 1-17 | Received 07 Apr 2016, Accepted 17 Aug 2016, Published online: 31 Aug 2016
Abstract
This study measures the effect of CCTV in Newark, NJ across three separate crime categories: auto theft, theft from auto, and violent crime. CCTV viewsheds, denoting camera line-of-sight, were units of analysis. Viewsheds for treatment units were created by digitizing live CCTV footage within a geographic information system (GIS). Control viewsheds were created with GIS tools and aerial imagery from Google maps. Treatment cases were matched with control cases via propensity score matching (PSM) to ensure statistical equivalency between groups. Effect was measured via odds ratios and average treatment on the treated statistics. Findings offer modest support for CCTV as a deterrent against auto theft while demonstrating no effect on the other crime types. These results suggest that CCTV appears to be a viable option for jurisdictions wishing to target auto theft. Agencies suffering from other street-level crime problems may not benefit from CCTV and may need to deploy CCTV alongside other evidence-based strategies, rather than as a stand-alone tactic, in order to achieve crime control benefits.
Amanda L. Robinson, Gillian M. Pinchevsky & Jennifer A. Guthrie
Pages 195-208 | Received 01 Jun 2015, Accepted 26 Oct 2015, Published online: 20 Nov 2015
Physical violence is but one of many tools that may be used to gain greater power within intimate relationships, yet the legal response has been critiqued for failing to recognise and respond to the full spectrum of abusive behaviours, such as coercive control. Using a sample of police officers from the United States (US) and the United Kingdom (UK), the current study utilises hypothetical vignettes to assess police officers’ perceptions of domestic abuse, including those incidents that are not necessarily physically violent, but involve stalking and other coercive, controlling behaviours that are harmful and require intervention. Within- and between-country similarities and differences were analysed. Findings revealed that the majority of officers in both countries possessed a good level of understanding of domestic abuse and how they should respond to it – amidst and beyond the physical violence. However, our analysis of both quantitative and qualitative data also showed that the use of physical violence is at the forefront of many officers’ expectations about domestic abuse, and that when physical violence is absent, the police response is less proactive. Our study finds some support for the idea that non-physical abuse does go “under the radar” to some extent for some officers, and that this is more the case for American officers than their British counterparts. Findings are discussed in terms of context of the research sites and implications for policy, practice and future research.
Gary Cordner Journal of Criminal Justice Education, Volume 27, 2016 - Issue 4 Pages 485-496 | Published online: 26 Jul 2016
Abstract
This essay takes the position that American society and its police would benefit from a robust system of university-based police education. This is not a new idea but rather an old one never realized. Unfortunately, though we were on a path toward developing just such an enterprise 50 years ago, along came criminal justice, the monster that ate police education.
Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology September 2016, Volume 31, Issue 3, pp 208–216
Chaplin, C. & Shaw, J. J
Abstract
Public beliefs about psychological issues relevant to the legal system have been demonstrated to often be misconceived, but the endorsement of such beliefs in law enforcement samples is largely unknown. This study was the first to compare psycho-legal beliefs between law enforcement officers and the general public in the UK. Participants were presented a 50-item questionnaire measuring five psycho-legal topics; police procedures, courts, tough on crime, mental illness, and memory and cognition. Despite direct involvement and relevant experience, law enforcement officers endorsed just as many empirically contradictory beliefs as those who were not law enforcement officers. Further, law enforcement officers were more confident in their responses. This research has implications for identifying areas of limited knowledge within police samples that can be targeted by police education.
he 8th Session of the CoP that took place in recent weeks reinforced a growing acknowledgement that transnational organized crime undermines sustainable development and causes havoc in vulnerable and fragile societies. In his remarks, UNODC Executive Director, Yury Fedotov, stated that work against transnational organized crime had received a considerable boost in recent years.
CRIMJUST has been presented to address TOC and drug trafficking. As more robust anti-drug strategies have restricted traditional cocaine routes, Latin American drug syndicates have strategically shifted towards new ones. Drug trafficking and TOC networks have expanded to West Africa, which has become a transit area of cocaine trafficking from Latin America and the Caribbean to Europe.
18-21 Septermber 2017, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Invitation open to submit abstracts, attend and register for the SVRI’s largest world-wide conference – SVRI Forum 2017. Through this event, the SVRI brings together over 450 researchers, gender activists, funders, policy makers, service providers, practitioners and survivors from around the world who are working to understand, prevent and respond to sexual and intimate partner violence. The SVRI Forum 2017 call for abstracts is available in English, Spanish and Portuguese. Submissions close on 1 February 2017.
Initially, the Syrian uprising was a non-violent movement calling for democratization. Why did it descend into political violence and civil war? Referring to the debates over the non-violent resistance paradigm, civil wars and external intervention, as well as state failure, Raymond Hinnebusch argues that to find answers, we need to look at the interaction of internal rebellion and external intervention. More specifically, the lecture discusses the state-building flaws that made the Assad regime vulnerable to the uprising; why mass anti-regime protests led neither to democratic transition, nor to revolution from below, but to armed civil war; and also how external intervention helped tip the conflict into a version of "new wars" and generated a failed state in which the regime lost territorial control of the country. This, in turn, set off "competitive regime re-formation" in the Syrian space. Professor Raymond Hinnebusch, Politikwissenschaftler; Professor für Internationale Beziehungen und die Politik des Mittleren Osten, University of St. Andrews Moderation: Dr. Miriam M. Müller (Joint PhD), Politik- und Islamwissenschaftlerin; Wissenschaftlerin in der Forschungsgruppe Makrogewalt im Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung. Ort: Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung, Mittelweg 36, 20148 Hamburg Beginn: 19 Uhr (Einlass ab 18.30 Uhr) Eintritt: frei
Posting Title: Consultant (Crime Prevention and Intervention Strategies) Department/Office: UNITED NATIONS OFFICE ON DRUGS AND CRIME Duty Station: VIENNA Posting Period: 16 November 2016 - 29 November 2016 Job Opening Number: 16-United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime-70008-Consultant Staffing Exercise N/A
The Council of Europe protects and promotes the human rights of everyone, including children. Based on the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, the European Convention on Human Rights and other legal standards, the Council of Europe promotes and protects the rights of 150 million children in Europe.
The fifth edition of the International Report on Crime Prevention and Community Safety develops, from the urban perspective, various topics relevant to the current context in cities. As with previous editions of the Report, the first chapter is a constant of ICPC’s International Reports, reviewing major trends in crime and in its prevention. The following two chapters address the relationship between the urban setting and the prevention of crime through two distinct lenses: the first gives a general overview of the issues and major trends facing cities; the second, in contrast, offers a comparative perspective, particularly in relation to national-local relationships in the Latin American context. The final three chapters address three fundamental topics on the prevention of urban crime: public transport, the prevention of drug-related crime, and the prevention of violent radicalization. Published every two years since 2008, the International Report has become a point of reference providing information and tools to help governments, local authorities, international organizations and other actors implement successful crime prevention policies in their countries, cities and communities
Denial of service attacks for a fee Understanding ‘booter’ operators Monday 5 December 2016, 11.00 am–12.00 pm The most frequent users of ‘booter’ or ‘stresser’ services are online gamers. These services are used to gain an advantage over an opponent by ‘booting’ them off the game with a denial of service attack. Booter services have customer-facing websites, whereby payments are taken for subscriptions, and attacks are requested. The operation of booter services requires not just technical expertise, but also information about the market for denial of service attacks and how to monetise this. Dr Alice Hutchings will discuss how this knowledge is obtained, exposure to these services, and the escalation from using to operating booter services, and to other forms of cybercrime. Dialogue Centre 4 National Circuit Barton, ACT 2601
Amanda M. Kalamar, Ph.D. a, Susan Lee-Rife, M.P.H., Ph.D. b, and Michelle J. Hindin, M.H.S., Ph.D. a This article identifies high-quality interventions and evaluations to decease child marriage in low- and middle-income countries. [Source: Journal of Adolescent Health].
Freedman J. Reproductive Health Matters. This study explores the multiple forms of vulnerability and insecurity for refugee women including various forms of sexual and gender-based violence. The current refugee “crisis” in Europe has created multiple forms of vulnerability and insecurity for refugee women including various forms of sexual and gender-based violence. Increasing numbers of women, either alone or with family, are attempting to reach Europe to seek protection from conflict and violence in their countries, but these women are subject to violence during their journey and/or on arrival in a destination country. The lack of adequate accommodation or reception facilities for refugees and migrants in Europe, as well as the closure of borders which has increased the need for smugglers to help them reach Europe, acts to exacerbate the violence and insecurity. Source: Science Direct., Volume 24, Issue 47, May 2016, Pages 18–26
The awards aim to recognise and celebrate exemplary reporting on violence against women and girls in print, broadcast and online news, features, comment and documentaries. [Source: EVAW Coalition].
Bertelsmann Stiftung's Press Release, 11/14/2016, Driven by a labor market recovery, EU citizens' opportunities for social participation have improved slightly for the first time since the beginning of the economic crisis in 2008. Not everyone is benefiting from this, however. A high risk of poverty persists in many countries. Children and youth in southern Europe continue to suffer most severely from the impact of the economic crisis.
22 Nov 2016 A new toolkit to help Ealing schools to comply with the Prevent duty was launched at the ‘Ealing online safety conference’ last week (17 November) and is now available.