Tag Archives: standards of practice

Reflections on the CEBCP International Summer School

This gallery contains 13 photos.

By Katie Gambier-Ross and Kate Thomson In June 2018, nine PhD students attended the SIPR – Centre for Evidence Based Crime Policy International Policing Scholar Summer School (IPSSS) at George Mason University in Virginia, USA. Eight of us are currently … Continue reading

More Galleries | 1 Comment

International policing ‘best practice’: learning lessons, transferring knowledge and developing guiding principles

This gallery contains 1 photo.

Written by Dr Georgina Sinclair, SIPR Associate ‘Mission Challenges, Lessons Learned and Guiding Principles; Policing with Communities in FCAS’. Workshop hosted by the Guarda Nacional Republicana (GNR) in Lisbon, Portugal 2017 (photo © GNR) This collection of essays can be … Continue reading

More Galleries | Leave a comment

Proximity interpreting: day-to-day policing and delivering access for deaf citizens

This gallery contains 5 photos.

 By: Robert Skinner (Heriot-Watt University) The objective for this PhD study, funded by the Scottish Graduate School for the Arts and Humanities (SGSAH), was not only to ask questions about how the police can appropriately serve deaf people, whose preferred language … Continue reading

More Galleries | Leave a comment

Evidence-based policing…use our data responsibly!

This gallery contains 1 photo.

By David Hamilton, Scottish Police Federation   In recent years, the contribution to policing practice and policy by academia in Scotland has become better recognised and actively encouraged. Now terms such as ‘evidence based policing’ are common place, understood and being … Continue reading

More Galleries | Leave a comment

Good practice based in good evidence needs good implementation

This gallery contains 1 photo.

Written by Professor Betsy Stanko*, Head, Evidence and Insight, Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime, London Successful implementation of new ideas and of using evidence-based findings often confront ‘traditional’ approaches to the ‘way we do things around here’.  We don’t … Continue reading

More Galleries | Leave a comment