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UCL Jill Dando Institute of Security and Crime Science

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Analyst courses

Crime analysis

Length: Four days

This course offers the essential skills that an analyst requires to become pro-actively involved in information-driven, evidence-led, problem solving approaches to reducing crime, ASB and other community safety issues. The course is highly interactive, and is designed to improve an analyst's awareness of data that are available across a range of agencies for analysis, extend their skills in analytical techniques, and build their confidence in ensuring that analysis is used to influence decision-making. The course places great emphasis on helping analysts to develop a real understanding of crime (and other public safety issues of interest), and contribute to how these problems are tackled. After taking the course, analysts are much better equipped for producing good quality analysis products such as problem profiles and target profiles.

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Geographic profiling analysis

Length: two weeks

This course is designed to give analysts the background and skills required to develop and to interpret geographic profiles correctly and to generate actionable recommendations that can support criminal investigations. The course is the only certified geographic profiling course held outside of North America. On successful completion, participants are certified as Geographic Profiling Analysts.

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Masterclass: Hypothesis testing analysis

Length: one day

This course introduces the hypothesis testing analysis approach that is designed to improve the explanatory content of problem profiles and other analytical products. Most analytical products developed in policing and community safety often only describe a problem, rather than understanding and explaining it. On this course we take you through the practical application of the hypothesis testing method for analysis and illustrate its use across a full range of crime and community safety problems.

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GIS: Understanding hotspots

Length: one day

This course introduces analysts and researchers to techniques for identifying and understanding hotspots, such as thematic mapping using geographic units and kernel density estimation.

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GIS: Advanced hotspot analysis

Length: one day

This course develops an analyst's skills for understanding hotspots and other spatial patterns of crime. The course introduces analysts to a more robust approach for identifying hotspots using statistical significance mapping (the Gi* statistic) and a technique for identifying emerging problem areas.

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GIS: Predictive mapping

Length: one day

This course examines the use of the patterning principles of repeat victimisation and near repeat victimisation for producing operational predictions of crime. Participants are taken through the process of measuring the extent of repeats and near repeats, how these patterns can be used to create mapping output that support operational predictions (and how the predictions can be used), and the theory that underpins the predictions.

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GIS: Risk and harm mapping

Length: one day

This course examines the use of analytical techniques for identifying priority areas based on risk, vulnerability and harm. The course involves instruction on three main techniques - the Vulnerable Localities Index, Risk Terrain Mapping and Harm Mapping (drawing from the principles of the Cambridge Crime Harm Index and the ONS Crime Severity Score).

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