Interventions and programmes
This problem is a UK government area of research interest (ARI) that was originally posted at https://ari.org.uk/ by a UK government organisation to indicate that they are keen to see research related to this area.
What works to reduce reoffending for different groups? For example, those with mental health problems, or those repeatedly convicted of low-level offences?
We want to address the causes of reoffending using personalised evidence, live data, and digital services to better target and sequence interventions. To do this we need to build the evidence base that can inform the development of more holistic measures than ‘proven reoffending’, factoring in a broader range of outcomes.
Contact details
We can be contacted at the following email address: evidence_partnerships@justice.gov.uk.
Related UKRI Projects
- Make Time Count Today - Reducing criminal reoffending on probation through data analytics, predictive behaviour recognition and optimised interventions
- Evaluating the long-term impact of Release on Temporary License (ROTL)
- Plymouth Community Justice Court: A Case Study of Problem Solving Interventions, Reducing Re-offending and Public Confidence
- A multi-cultural comparative study into the influence national level variations have on desistance from crime
- ADR UK Data First Evaluation Fellowship
- Righting recidivism: unlocking the cognitive underpinnings of successful interventions to reduce reoffending
- Enforced alcohol abstinence: does it reduce reoffending?
- Still 'living it down'? The old problem of convictions: evaluating the impact of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 after 50 years.
- Regulating Justice: The Dynamics of Compliance and Breach in Criminal Justice Social Work in Scotland
- Distant Voices: Coming Home