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.
Strengthening the evidence base on the measurement of police productivity and how marginal changes in types of police spend can improve outcomes.
Crimes such as homicide and theft, and drugs such as heroin and cocaine have always been of public concern, and there has been a recent focus on areas such as child sexual abuse, modern slavery, new psychoactive substances, online fraud, and online indecent images of children.
Contact details
research@homeoffice.gov.uk
Related UKRI Projects
- Economics of the Police: Recruitment, Retention and Finance
- Markets in Policing: The Appetite for and Organisational, Cultural and Moral Limits to Markets in Public Policing
- Crime, Policing and Citizenship (CPC) - Space-Time Interactions of Dynamic Networks
- An Exploratory Knowledge Exchange Platform for Policing: Exploiting Knowledge Assets, Utilising Data and Piloting Research Co-production
- Working Time and Wellbeing in the Police Service: Practical Steps to Monitor, Manage and Balance the Working Hours/Working Lives of Police Inspectors
- Exploring Synergies within Volunteering in Law Enforcement and Public Safety in the UK and Japan.
- Demand Modelling and Predictive Police Positioning for Effective Service Provision
- Making and Breaking Barriers: Assessing the Value of Mounted Police Units in the UK
- Policing and Citizenship: Resourcing a Better Understanding
- Promoting justice: Professionalising frontline policing with an evidence-based Structured Interview Protocol