Evidence-based policing


Evidence-based policing is an approach to policy making and tactical decision-making for police departments. It has its roots in the larger movement towards evidence-based practices.
Advocates of evidence-based policing emphasize the value of statistical analysis, empirical research and ideally randomized controlled trials. EBP does not dismiss more traditional drivers of police decision-making, but seeks to raise awareness and increase the application of scientific testing, targeting and tracking of police resources, especially during times of budget cuts and greater public scrutiny.

Origins

Experiments had been used in earlier decades to find better policing methods, before Lawrence Sherman first outlined a definition of "evidence-based policing" in 1998.
The Police Foundation was founded in 1970. In 1971-72 the Police Foundation worked with the Kansas City Police Department to carry out a landmark study on patrol cars in what is known as the Kansas City preventive patrol experiment.
In the early 1980s, Sherman worked with Richard Berk and the Police Foundation to carry out the Minneapolis Domestic Violence Experiment. The study showed that arresting domestic violence suspects was a deterrent against repeat offending. The study had a "virtually unprecedented impact in changing then-current police practices." Sherman later worked with fellow criminologist David Weisburd for a 1995 study which showed the efficacy of focusing police crime prevention resources on small hot spots of crime.
In a 1998 Police Foundation "Ideas in American Policing" lecture, Sherman outlined the concept of "evidence-based policing". His core idea was that police practice can be made far more effective if tactics proven to work during controlled field experiments are prioritized. Angel Cabrera later described Sherman as being the "father" of evidence-based policing.
In February 2000, Sherman co-founded the Campbell Collaboration's Crime and Justice Group, which has pursued the synthesis of research evidence on the effectiveness of policing and other crime prevention practices. In 2013 Sherman established the as a global police training and research consultancy service for members, and
in 2017 he launched the as the membership journal of the Cambridge Centre. The Journal's priority is to publish original, applied research led by "pracademic" police officers, with many articles based on master's degree theses completed under supervision of Sherman and his Cambridge colleagues, Heather Strang and Sir Denis O'Connor, by police leaders who were mid-career, part-time students in the .
The first professional Society of Evidence-Based Policing was founded at Cambridge University in 2010, and now has some 2,000 members from mostly UK police agencies. In 2013, police in collaboration with the University of Queensland established the , which now has over 2000 members. In 2015, both Canada, and the United States established their own branches of this learned professional society. The Police Foundation provided support for the establishment of the American Society of Evidence-Based Policing, as it once did to create the Police Executive Research Forum and the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives.

Scope

Evidence can be used in a number of ways to support policing:

Enforcement

Policy-makers may factor in the population-wide priorities in policing action. Freedom from violent coercion is associated with happier populations, which may inform the use of force, or actions that nominally enforce laws but raise levels of community violence. Law enforcement may make enforcement decisions on the basis of flow-through effects in subsequent crimes. For instance, a 2011 meta-analysis drug market disruption, such as seizures of illicit goods or arrests of organised crime figures, as with drug prohibition increases levels of community violence and associated crimes. This contraindicates certain drug control strategies. And, evidence from illicit distribution/trafficking networks suggest that gang membership isn't important to the flow of resources between violent, competing groups. With community outcomes in mind, this would contraindicate bans on gang membership. The use of evidence in this manner sometimes leads to law enforcement decisions that contrast with popular intuition. For instance, gang members are not prohibited from joining the United States military.

Education

Police may also share evidence about the consequences of crime as a preventative measure. For instance, politically motivated groups that use violent methods, or escalate from nonviolent to violent methods are less likely to gain the compliance of governments, suggesting that terrorism is less effective than civil action. And, bank robbery typically only returns around 15,000 UK pounds per person.

Sentencing

Evidence can also be used in sentencing. Certainty of punishment, and therefore consistency of sentencing deters crime far more effectively than the imminence or severity of punishment.

In forensics

There is a growing movement for the use of blinded procedures in lineups in which the officer who shows the photos to the witness does not know which photo is of the suspect. The use of such blinded procedures may reduce false identification of suspects.

United Kingdom

In 2008, Sherman made EBP the core of the Police Executive Programme at Cambridge University, a part-time course of study for senior police leaders from around the world to earn a Diploma or Master’s in applied criminology. In that year, the National Policing Improvement Agency funded the first international conference on EBP, which was attended by police executives from Asia, Australia, Europe and the US. Since then the conference has been held each July, with the 10th International Conference in 2017 attended by over 300 police and scholars from six continents.
In 2010, a group of UK police officers founded the Society of Evidence-Based Policing, and elected Sherman Honorary President, along with Sir Peter Fahy, Chief Constable of the UK's Greater Manchester Police; as of 2015 the Society has over 2,800 members, including its 750-member Australia-New Zealand affiliate, consisting primarily UK police officers but with membership from Australia to Argentina and North America. The Society's twice-annual UK meetings have attracted over 200 attendees per meeting, as well as press coverage.
In 2012, the UK Home Office founded the College of Policing, which took over many of the responsibilities of the National Police Improvement Agency. One of the College's five strategic objectives is "identifying, developing and promoting good practice based on evidence". The College is committed to identifying and sharing with police practitioners "what works". In 2013, the UK's largest police force, London's Metropolitan Police Service committed to "crime fighting based on what we know works".

What Works Center For Crime Reduction Toolkit

The College of Policing in the UK has created the What Works Centre for Crime Reduction, part of a network of What Works Centres created to provide easy access to robust and comprehensive evidence to guide decision-making on public spending. The Crime Reduction Toolkit is an online tool that allows users to obtain information on the evidence for and against various interventions and use this to help shape their crime reduction efforts. The What Works Centre Crime Reduction Toolkit currently includes 35 evaluations of interventions and has identified over 300 systematic reviews covering 60 different interventions.

InterventionEffectsEvidenceReferences
After-school programsNo impact on crime Very strong quality
Aggression replacement training for offendersNo impact on crime Moderate quality
Alcohol pricing, including alcohol taxDecrease in crimeStrong quality
Alley gating Decrease in crimeVery strong quality
Alternative education programmesNo impact on crime Strong quality
CCTVDecrease in crimeStrong quality
Cognitive Behavioral TherapyDecrease in crimeStrong quality
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Domestic ViolenceNo impact on crime Strong quality
Correctional boot campsNo impact on crime Very strong quality
Criminal sanctions to prevent domestic violenceNo impact on crime Limited quality
Drunk driving courtsNo impact on crime Strong quality
Drug courtsDecrease in crime Very strong quality
Educational interventions to prevent relationship violence in young peopleNo impact on crimeVery strong quality
Electronic monitoringNo impact on crime Moderate quality
Environmental design to prevent robberyNo impact on crime Limited quality
Firearm lawsDecrease in crime Strong quality
Hot spots policingDecrease in crimeVery strong quality
Increased police patrols to reduce drunk drivingNo impact on crime Strong quality
Juvenile curfew lawsNo impact on crime Moderate quality
Mass media campaigns to reduce drunk drivingNo impact on crime Limited quality
Mental health courtsDecrease in crime Very strong quality
Minimum legal drinking age lawsNo impact on crime Limited quality
Moral Reconation TherapyDecrease in crimeStrong quality
Multisystemic therapyNo impact on crime Strong quality
Music making interventionsNo impact on crimeLimited quality
Neighbourhood watchDecrease in crimeStrong quality
Policies on hours and days of alcohol salesNo impact on crime Moderate quality
Restorative Justice conferencingDecrease in crimeVery strong quality
Retail tagging to prevent shop theftNo impact on crimeStrong quality
"Scared Straight" programmesIncrease in crimeVery strong quality
School-based programmes to reduce drunk drivingNo impact on crime Moderate quality
Second responder programmes to prevent domestic abuseNo impact on crime Strong quality
Sobriety checkpointsDecrease in crimeVery strong quality
Street lightingDecrease in crimeVery strong quality
Temporary release from prisonNo impact on crime Limited quality
Training probation officers in core correctional practicesDecrease in crimeStrong quality
Transferring youths to the adult criminal justice systemIncrease in crimeLimited quality
Victim Offender MediationDecrease in crime Strong quality
Wilderness challenge programmesNo impact on crime Strong quality

United States

EBP is acknowledged by some senior police leaders as a valuable approach to improve policing. The FBI Academy offers a course on EBP.
EBP has become the subject of debate in research journals, deliberating the extent to which policing should be guided by experimental criminology. But there is consensus that more needs to be done to bridge the 'translation gap' between frontline police officers and academics.
Academics from the Department of Criminology, Law and Society at George Mason University launched the in 2008. Their records, orders and rates scientific evaluations in policing and seeks to enable police departments to access and assess existing evidence.
In 2015, a group of working police officers and crime analysts formed the American Society of Evidence-Based Policing. This organization was formed with the intent of educating police officers about the concept of EBP, advocating for the use of best available research to drive policing strategies and tactics and facilitating the creation of new research findings by connecting researchers and practitioners. Membership is open to all serving police officers, civilian staff members, researchers and academics. The first annual ASEBP conference was held on the campus of Arizona State University in Phoenix, Arizona on May 22nd and 23rd, 2017 with conference attendees and panelists representing the United States, Canada, Mexico and the United Kingdom.

Australia

The Australia & New Zealand Society of Evidence Based Policing was formed in April 2013 in Brisbane, Australia. The ANZSEBP is a police practitioner-led Society. The mission of the ANZSEBP is to develop, disseminate and advocate for police to use scientific research to guide best practice in all aspects of policing.
The Society comprises both full members and honorary members including police staff members, research professionals and others who aim to make evidence-based approaches part of everyday policing in Australia and New Zealand.
The ANZSEBP held its inaugural conference at the Australian Institute of Police Management, Sydney, Australia in March 2015. The Society was fortunate to secure Professor David Weisburd, Mr Peter Neyroud, Professor Lorraine Mazerolle, Chief Superintendent Alex Murray West Midlands Police and Assistant Commissioner Peter Martin to present at the conference. Further to that six short shot presentations were made that highlighted experiments or research throughout Australasia.

Canada

The Canadian Society of Evidence Based Policing was launched in April 2015 in Manchester, UK, as an affiliate of the UK-based Society of Evidence Based Policing, as well as ASEBP and ANZ-SEBP. CAN-SEBP is a collaborative effort between police practitioners and academic researchers aimed at generating actionable research to inform policy, practice, education and training in the field of public safety. Partners in the Society - who maintain executive-level steering and oversight functions - include representatives from several Canadian police forces and universities. Other agencies and researchers serve as active collaborators.
CAN-SEBP's membership consists of active and retired police officers, civilian police members, applied policing researchers, graduate researchers and representatives from provincial, federal and municipal community safety groups.
CAN-SEBP's international advisory group includes: Professor David Weisburd, Mr Peter Neyroud, Professor Lorraine Mazerolle, Chief Superintendent Alex Murray West Midlands Police and Assistant Commissioner Peter Martin.