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The 6th SIPR Annual Lecture The new police professionalism – democracy, evidence based practice and a 21st century profession Professor Peter Neyroud CBE.

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Presentation on theme: "The 6th SIPR Annual Lecture The new police professionalism – democracy, evidence based practice and a 21st century profession Professor Peter Neyroud CBE."— Presentation transcript:

1 The 6th SIPR Annual Lecture The new police professionalism – democracy, evidence based practice and a 21st century profession Professor Peter Neyroud CBE QPM

2 Overview Reflections on the ‘old’ police professionalism From the old professionalism to the 21 st century Evidence, myths and legends Police professionalism and politics Developing a new professionalism

3 August Vollmer (1876-1955) Chief of Berkeley, CA 1909-1932 Professionalised crime investigation Put radios in cars Recruited women and african-americans Advocated college education for cops

4 O.W.Wilson (1900- 1972) Chief in Wichita and Chicago Advocate of rapid response, deterrent patrol and investigation Founder of police science degrees Police Officer and ‘clinical’ Professor

5 Air Marshall Lord Trenchard (1873-1956) Metropolitan Police Commissioner 1931-1935 Founder of Hendon Police College to educate an ‘officer class’ for policing Founder of the ‘Trenchard’ scheme to bring young men from the ‘best schools’ in to run policing His new Inspectors were lampooned as “genstables”

6 Professionals, genstables or plebs?

7 Police professionalism and democracy Steve Herbert’s “Tangled up in Blue” Subservience Separation Generativity

8 Subservience Responsiveness Consultation Accountability

9 Separation Independence under the law Cultural separation – the remoteness of authority

10 Generativity The police influence on society Epistemological – police structure citizen understanding of crime Moral – and project images about the morality of crime and crime-fighting

11 The end of the ‘old’ professional era Research established that Random patrol did not produce effective deterrence Rapid response did not lead to more crimes prevented Reactive detection produced little more than information from the public

12 End of the ‘old’ professional era In the USA, random patrol became associated with ‘racial profiling’ In the UK there was the watershed of Confait and the Brixton riots A Royal Commission and a Public Inquiry

13 Community Policing The search for a mission beyond crime fighting Built around Goldstein’s problem-solving model Recognition that majority of problems that police were asked to deal with were not crime

14 Intelligence-led policing A British contribution to policing A professional discipline of managing police Integrating other approaches

15 Compstat Rediscovery of police confidence to fight crime The opportunities of ‘big data’ The emergence of ‘evidence-based tactics’ ‘cops on the dots’

16 Evidence based policing Place: high crime places People: tackling the most harmful and persistent Protecting victims: focus on vulnerability Persuasion: importance of legitimacy

17 Myths and legends Despite 25 years of research police, politicians and the public are still thinking about policing and crime based on intuition not researched facts The ‘facts’ that follow are drawn from Campbell systematic reviews of evidence

18 Myth 1 Myth: More police on patrol mean less crime so lets get “more bobbies on the beat” Fact: More focused patrol of hotspots and targeted problem-solving will deliver crime reductions

19 Myth 2 Myth 2: But crime will just “move around the corner” Fact: No: far from displacement, most studies show a diffusion of benefits from targeted approaches

20 Myth 3 Myth 3: Prosecuting offenders in court is an effective deterrent Fact: Formal processing of offenders (particularly young offenders) tends to have a negative impact on offending suggesting that “tough” approaches should be used carefully to target the persistent and harmful

21 Myth 4 Myth 4: Community policing prevents crime Fact: There is very little evidence to support this but it does have a significant impact on police legitimacy and, one component, problem-solving, can be used in a targeted way to reduce crime

22 Myth 5 Myth 5: traditional methods work best – e.g. house to house and arresting and interviewing suspects to detect burglary Fact: DNA is more effective at identifying suspects in a burglary than even fingerprints let alone ‘traditional detective work’

23 Why do the myths matter? An analysis of a cross section of the campaign pledges of Police and Crime Commissioners in England and Wales shows A reliance on ‘increasing arrests and prosecutions’ Pledges to “put more officers on the beat” Only limited reference to policies that are supported by evidence

24 The police are not much better In every police audience that I teach – across the world – I ask police officers and police leaders whether they have read the evidence With rare exceptions, they have not. It is not part of their education….they know the Theft Act but not the evidence on how best to prevent theft happening

25 Current influences on policing practice Craft: ‘clinical experience model’ Professional traditions Law and Bureaucracy Politics 25

26 Standard police tactics Preventive patrol Arrest Prosecution Post release supervision 26

27 The Treatment model? Why do these tactics work (or better still, do they work?)? If you were embarking on a medical treatment, would you not –Want to know how it works? –Want to know about possible side effects? –Want to know whether the doctor is well qualified to deliver it? 27

28 What are the active ingredients? Deterrence –severity –certainty –Celerity Defiance Desistance Legitimacy 28

29 Deterrence: what are the ingredients of deterrence? Rewards Crime Commission costs Perceived formal sanctions Perceived informal sanctions Perceived cost of apprehension Perceived possibility of successful completion Perceived possibility of apprehension given non completion Perceived possibility of apprehension given completion 29

30 And like all medicines, It will only work if you follow the instructions on the packet If the diagnosis of your condition is correct Some patients will experience side effects Overdosing can cause serious side effects With some chronic conditions, you may need to repeat the treatment… 30

31 Take a problem like burglary Traditional response Focus on traditional methods of detection Flooding areas with extra patrols General campaigns to encourage crime prevention Evidence based approach Predictive prevention patrols Focus on solvability Targeting high harm/highly persistent offenders Repeat victimisation strategy ‘Turning Point’ approach for first time offenders 31

32 Predictive prevention Deploying work developed by Johnson and Bowers –Using data to identify time/geography of high risk places –Targeting high risk areas selectively –Focusing on crime routes 32

33 Burglary Solvability Detailed analysis of data from burglary Focus on factors correlated with successful detection Aim to –Increase detection rates –Speed up process to intervene with offenders earlier 33

34 Forest Plots – Burglary Dwelling Completed Offences

35 High Risk (2.2%) Neither High nor Low Risk (36%) Low Risk (61%) High, Medium and low risk offenders Cosma, Sherman and Neyroud (forthcoming)

36 Repeat Victimisation strategy Focus on victims and areas that have been burgled Target harden around victims – cocooning strategy Use Neighbourhood Watch in high crime areas 36

37 Operation Turning Point Combined deterrence and desistance treatment for first time/low harm offenders Deferred prosecution linked to conditions designed to encourage desistance –Curfews –Drugs treatment –Non-association Certainty and Celerity linked to desistance support 37

38 A new professional model? Using evidence to test practice and practice innovation to generate research Requiring all practitioners to qualify and keep qualified Requiring managers and leaders to be qualified to manage and lead Having a professional body that can ensure that knowledge is spread to the profession and beyond 38

39 Key developments Understanding what we know: i.e. Systematic Reviews - the Campbell Collaboration on Crime and Justice (hosted by Norway) Development of translation tools - the Matrix (George Mason University), NPIA/National College of Policing POLKA, UK. A revolution in Training: National Police Training Colleges into Police Universities and integration of Police Training with Higher Education The "Age of Austerity" - the pressure for more cost- effective policing 39

40 Translation tools George Mason University Evidence based Crime Center Matrix A comprehensive set of current "high quality studies" which have evaluated policing using a control v treatment Too many are US based but UK currently has a substantial number of Randomised Control Trials in progress GMU are working on supporting the Matrix with training frameworks and field tools to support an evidence based approach 40

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42 Translation tools The Police Online Knowledge Area will migrate to the new College of Policing on 1st December Designed to blend knowledge products drawn from studies with practitioner guidance and expert groups SIPR has an impressive track record of building practitioner-academic research partnership 42

43 Police training and Higher Education Many countries have developed Police Universities from their police training colleges Trend to accredit police training or to partner with Higher Education to deliver Potential to move beyond this model? 43

44 Neyroud Review Pre-entry qualification at Level 4: new entrants should be properly prepared for role Management qualification at Level 5: new managers should be qualified to manage Senior Management qualification at Level 7: senior management should be prepared to lead and manage at strategic level

45 The College of Policing Not a traditional “police college” but a professional body responsible for Educational standards Professional practice standards Research and knowledge generation and dissemination Accreditation of practice

46 Police and Higher Education O.W.Wilson’s vision of police and Universities coming together to deliver a better society is relevant for 21 st century SIPR has placed Scotland in the vanguard The new Scottish Police force can maintain that lead by developing clinical-academic partnerships in teaching and research

47 Linking Police Science with Leadership and Management Tendency for education in Leadership and management to be divorced from science Important that disciplines of leadership and management in policing are also scientific And are developed with an understanding of the particular challenges of policing 47

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49 Leading the “new professional” policing Leaders are focused on –Processes –Outcomes Leaders need to –Challenge practice with evidence –Provide a vision to translate police activity into outcomes –Pay attention to values and ethics –Transformational and ‘authentic’ not just transactional –Be International in their outlook 49

50 Plebs or professionals? Professionals Led by well qualified leaders, with Evidence Based Strategies


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