XClose

UCL Jill Dando Institute of Security and Crime Science

Home
Menu

CGCP Police-Community Relations Research

 

A group of police

    Neighbourhood Policing and Collective Efficacy: Tackling Serious Violent Crime

    People
    Julia Yesberg, Ben Bradford

    Project Summary
    This project explores the links between neighbourhood policing, trust, collective efficacy and violence crime. The project aims to develop a greater understanding of neighbourhood policing practices across London. Safer Neighbourhood Teams in approximately 150 wards in London will be surveyed, and interviews and field observations will also be carried out. This information will then be connected to ward-level collective efficacy and violent crime data to provide empirical evidence on the effectiveness, or not, of specific neighbourhood policing practices.  

    Planned Outputs & Impact
    Planned outputs include academic papers, conference papers, knowledge exchange activities, and public engagement. A large-scale end of project cocnference to engage stakeholders and wider audience will also take place.

    Funder (where applicable)
    This project is funded by the ESRC.

    Duration
    June 2019 - December 2021                                                                      

    From Coercion to Consent: Social Identity, Legitimacy and a Process Model of Police Procedural Justice (CONSIL)

    People
    Ben Bradford, Arabella Kyprianides

    Project Summary
    This project is designed to assist UK police forces to understand and tackle the issue of perceived legitimacy of their practices among marginalised sections of the community, and thereby improve police-community relations, undermine the likelihood that police will use coercion, and empower democratic forms of police practice. This project draws from Procedural Justice and Social Identity theories and aims to expand upon existing understanding about police-public encounters. The research team is working closely with policing partners in three of the UK's largest police forces - the Metropolitan Police, West Midlands and West Yorkshire - observing routine interactions between the police and the public and conducting interviews with the people involved in those encounters, to interpret how they are experienced, processed, and judged. A second strand of the project will involve production of a series of fully immersive Virtual Reality vignettes, showing a variety of police-public interactions, that will be used in a series of experimental studies.

    Partner Organisations
    This project is being carried out in collaboration with research teams at Keele University and London School of Economics.

    Planned Output & Impact
    Planned outputs include academic papers, conference presentations, public engagement and knowledge-exchange activities. Engagement activities also include workshops with relevant police departments (e.g. Metropolitan Police Service and West Midlands Police), key national policing meetings, advisory and steering groups, and an end of project workshop held at IGCP.

    Funder (where applicable)
    This project is funded by the ESRC.

    Duration
    September 2018 -  August 2021

    Links to Outputs / Deliverables

    • Kyprianides, A., Bradford, B., Stott, C. (2020). Policing the street population in the context of Covid19. The Municipal Journal.
    Public Perceptions of Armed Police

    People
    Julia Yesberg, Ben Bradford

    Project Summary
    This British police, famously, operate largely unarmed, and have done so since the inception of the Metropolitan Police in 1829. However, recent terror attacks and an increase in serious violent crime have prompted moves to arm more officers and make armed police more visible on the streets. Very little is known about how such developments might be received by the public, or about how people judge weather arming more police is appropriate. This project, co-funded by MOPAC and the IGCP, comprises the first ever in-depth academic study of public reactions to armed police. The project will use survey based and experimental methods to explore how people think about armed police, whether they support the arming of more officers, and whether more police might bolster, or undermine, trust and legitimacy. 

    Planned Outputs & Impact
    Planned outputs include acdemic papers and conference presentations.

    Funder (where applicable)
    IGCP/MOPAC

    Status
    Live

    Links to Outputs / Deliverables

    Public Perceptions of Police Use of Force

    People
    Ben Bradford, Julia Yesberg, Arabella Kyprianides

    Project Summary 
    This piece of work is assessing how people respond to different use of force scenarios. Initial findings from this study were included in a CoP report to the NPCC in November 2019. 

    Partner Organisations
    College of Policing (CoP)

    Planned Output & Impact
    Academic publications and research findings feeding into CoP work on police use of force.

    Funder
    IGCP/College of Policing

    Duration
    October 2019 - Open-ended