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What works centre for crime reduction

The government has selected the College of Policing to host the What Works Centre for Crime Reduction - part of a world-leading network of centres providing robust, comprehensive evidence to guide public spending decisions.

What Works Centre

The What Works Centre for Crime Reduction will:

  • review research on practices and interventions to reduce crime
  • label the evidence base in terms of quality, cost and impact
  • provide Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs) and other crime reduction  stakeholders with the knowledge, tools and guidance to help them target their resources more effectively.

It will be led by a core team from the College of Policing, and supported by a "commissioned partnership programme" which has been jointly funded by the College and the Economic and Social Research Council.

The table below outlines a range of potential benefits from the Centre's introduction.

Benefit

Example

More informed decisionsEvidence will be translated into practical insights that the police service and their partners can easily use
Better value for moneyGuidance will be clear, helping decision-makers to access and apply the evidence locally to make choices about where to spend and disinvest
Reassurance and accountabilitySharing knowledge about "what works" with the public will help build confidence in the police service and its crime reduction partners
Collaboration and partnershipLinks will be strengthened between the police service, crime reduction partners and the academic sector
Prevention, not reactionEvidence will be provided on the most effective approaches that can help prevent crime

For more information about the What Works Centre for Crime Reduction please contact Nicky Miller or Mark Abram at the College of Policing.

Research programme

The commissioned partnership programme will deliver work to support the What Works Centre for Crime Reduction, helping the College of Policing to become an evidence-based professional body.

The programme started in September 2013 and will focus on:

• mapping and assessing the quality of the evidence base
• ranking and labelling interventions in terms of quality, cost and impact
• training for practitioners on evidence appraisal and an evaluation of the Centre's overall effectiveness.

Commissioned partnership programme: list of work packages

Work package

Description

1.List of systematic reviewsA comprehensive listing will be made of systematic reviews on crime reduction topics to establish a common database of knowledge on searches and expert consultation.
2. Mapping and evidence synthesisSystematic mapping and full synthesis of the evidence across a range of specified crime reduction priority areas will be undertaken. At a minimum, a qualitative synthesis will be expected for every topic, complemented by a quantitative synthesis if sufficient evidence exists.
3. Development of decision criteriaA comparative labelling scheme will be developed, using a consistent evaluation standard to rate and rank the effectiveness of interventions and the overall cost-saving.
4. Application of criteria to reviewsA taxonomy will be developed of ranked and labelled interventions. This will be developed by applying the criteria to each systematic review identified from work packages 1 and 2.
5. Developing advice on costing interventionsDetailed guidance will be produced for practitioners on how to undertake cost analysis of specific interventions.
6. Design of a development programme on crime reduction evidence appraisalA development programme will be produced to equip practitioners with the capability to understand, critique and make effective use of evidence.
7. Deliver a pilot of the programme (to police practitioners)A pilot of the development programme will be undertaken to assess how far its aims and objectives have been met.
8. Primary researchThe programme will support primary research on a topic to be decided in collaboration between the grant holder(s) and partners.
9. Test impact of the What Works Centre on decision-makingAn evaluation of the overall effectiveness of the Centre will be undertaken.

Project partners

The three-year commissioned partnership programme is co-funded by the College of Policing and the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC).

The consortium comprises University College London (UCL), IOE, UCL's Faculty of Education and Society, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Birkbeck College, and Cardiff, Dundee, Surrey and Southampton universities.

For more information on the institutions and individuals involved in this work please use the following links:

College of Policing

Economic and Social Research Council 

University College London - Department of Security and Crime Science

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine - Cochrane Injuries Group

Birkbeck College - Institute for Criminal Policy Research 

Cardiff University - School of Social Sciences

Southampton University - Division of Social Sciences: Sociology, Social Policy, Criminology & Anthropology

University College London - IOE, UCL's Faculty of Education and Society - Social Science Research Unit and EPPI Centre

Dundee University - Scottish Institute for Policing Research 

Surrey University - Department of Sociology