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.
Understanding which individuals are at risk of becoming offenders (and/or victims), for what reasons and at what stages of their lives.
More detailed research priorities for serious and organised crime can be found at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/serious-and-organised-crime-home-office-research-priorities- april-2018-to-march-2021 ↩
Contact details
research@homeoffice.gov.uk
Related UKRI Projects
- Strategic Hub for Organised Crime Research
- Understanding the nature, extent and outcomes of serious and organised crime cases heard before the Crown Courts in England and Wales (2013-2019)
- North-South Irish Responses to Transnational Organised Crime
- Dirty Assets: Experiences, reflections, and lessons learnt from a decade of legislation on criminal money laundering and terrorism financing
- How Online Technologies are Transforming Transnational Organised Crime (Cyber-TNOC)
- UNOC: Understanding the Nexus of Organised Crime: Policing in Marginalised Communities linked with organised Crime: Best Practice Network Development
- Synalogik: Detecting and challenging Local Government Authority (LGA) Fraud committed by Organised Criminal Groups (OCG) through Investigation Process Automation
- CybercrimeNLP (CC-NLP): A natural language processing toolkit for the interdisciplinary analysis of underground online forums
- Predictive analytics and Policing: Translating cutting-edge academic research into actionable intelligence and developing useable software tools
- Why do juveniles commit crime? New Evidence from England's linked administrative data