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EUCPN: Community-oriented policing: discover our 10 key principles for a succesful implementation

The objective of this toolbox is to support policymakers and practitioners, in particular police chiefs and senior management within police organisations, in achieving a successful community-oriented policing strategy. Through an analysis of the current literature and in-depth discussions with experts in the field, we draw up clear and easily understandable guidelines.

Discover our 10 key principles for a succesful implementation

 

 

Now available on Public Safety Canada’s website: Developing a Common Data Standard for Measuring Attitudes toward the Police in Canada

Now available on Public Safety Canada’s website

(voir ci-contre pour la version française)

 

Research Report – Developing a Common Data Standard for Measuring Attitudes toward the Police in Canada

This report discusses the inconsistencies in public attitudes surveys across police services, and presents the recommended core indicators for measuring public attitudes toward the police in Canada.

 

Research Summary – Developing a Common Data Standard for Measuring Attitudes toward the Police in Canada

This is a summary of the report which discusses the inconsistencies in public attitudes surveys across police services, and presents the recommended core indicators for measuring public attitudes toward the police in Canada.

 

Extremism Risk: From People to Places by UCL JDI Institute for Global City Policing

Date and Time

Thu, 30 January 2020

18:00 – 21:00 GMT

Institute for Global City Policing Annual Lecture

 

Location

London's Living Room

City Hall

110 The Queen's Walk

London

SE1 2AA

United Kingdom

 

Extremism Risk: From People to Places

Noemie Bouhana and Paul Gill

 

Programme

18:00 - Welcome and introduction from Sophie Linden, Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime, and Ben Bradford, Director of the Institute for Global City Policing

18:15 - IGCP Annual Lecture

19:15 - Q&A

20:00 - Drinks Reception

21:00 - Close

 

 

Abstract and speakers

Extremism risk is associated with certain individuals, whose characteristics and circumstances appear to make them more susceptible to radicalisation than others. It's also associated with certain places, which seem to generate or attract radicalised individuals more than others. To avail ourselves of the full range of possible interventions against extremism, we need, therefore, to understand both the factors that contribute to individual susceptibility to extremism and the processes that support the emergence of extremism-enabling environments. This lecture will present results from two major new studies that consider the social and environmental determinants of extremist attitudes.

 

Noémie Bouhana is Associate Professor in Security and Crime Science at University College London, where she leads the Counter-Terrorism Research Group. Her research has been funded by the European Union, the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL), the Office of Security and Counter-Terrorism (OSCT), the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), Public Safety Canada, and the US National Institute of Justice (NIJ), among others. At present, she directs the $1M project "The Social Ecology of Radicalisation", an international study funded by the US Department of Defence Minerva .

 

Paul Gill is a Professor in Security and Crime Science at University College London. He has over 80 publications on the topic of terrorist behaviour including publications in leading psychology, criminology and political science journals. He has conducted research funded by the Office for Naval Research, the Department of Homeland Security, DSTL, the European Union, the National Institute of Justice, CREST, GIFCT, and Public Safety Canada.