Title: THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF CRIME PREVENTION
1THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF CRIME PREVENTION
Week 1 Introduction and Overview
2Today
- Course Overview
- Objectives of the course
- Course overview, weekly schedule
- Course requirements
- Definition and description
- Crime prevention vs. traditional CJS approaches
- Crime prevention typologies
- Institutional levels
- Brief history of crime prevention
3Course Objectives
- Better understanding of crime prevention
- Historical theoretical, conceptual empirical
overview - Enhance practical skills
- Contribute to your analytical critical thinking
skills - Critical, analytical, problem-oriented approach
is central to crime prevention - Enhance your communication (writing) skills
- Proposal writing
- Report writing
- Drafting a crime prevention plan
4Class Structure
- First Half Theoretical
- Theoretical, conceptual, empirical overview
- Interactive exercises
- Second Half Practical Application
- Case Studies
- Video
- Guest lecturers
- Group discussion and exercises
5Course Overview
- Four parts to this course
- Introduction and Overview
- Dominant Crime Prevention Approaches
- Social developmental, situational, restorative
justice, etc. - Special topics in crime prevention
- Poor neighbourhoods, women, schools, organized
crime, economic crime, - Planning, implementing and evaluating a crime
prevention project
6Weekly Schedule
- Jan. 7/14 - Course Introduction / Theoretical and
Conceptual Overview - Jan. 21 - Situational Crime Prevention and CPTED
- Jan. 28 - Crime Prevention Through Social
Development - Feb. 4 - Community Crime Prevention
- Feb. 11 - Restorative Justice
- Feb. 18 - Reading Break (No classes)
- Feb. 25 - Mid Term Exam (Multiple Choice)
- March 3 - Planning for Crime Prevention
- March 10 - Implementing and Evaluating a Crime
Prevention Plan - March 17 - Government Policies and Programs
- March 24 - Policing and Crime Prevention (First
Assignment Due) - March 31 - Special Topics in Crime Prevention and
Community Safety - April 7 Final Exam
- April 20 Final Assignment Due
7Course Requirements
- Mid Term Exam (Multiple Choice) 15
- Research Proposal 20
- Crime Prevention Plan 35
- Final Exam (Multiple Choice) 15
- Group Exercises/Participation! 15
8Overview
9Definitions
- there is no universally accepted definition, nor
is there a consensus as to the boundaries of
crime prevention - some argue that we should define whether a
particular strategy of program is crime
prevention by its results and not be its methods
10Definitions
- National Crime Prevention Institute (1978)
- the anticipation, recognition, and appraisal of
a crime risk and the initiative of some action to
remove it. - Van Dijk and de Waard (1990)
- the total of all private initiatives and state
policies, other that the enforcement of criminal
law, aimed at the reduction of damage caused by
acts defined as criminal by the state. - Eckblom (1996)
- an intervention in mechanisms that cause
criminal events, in a way which seeks to reduce
the probability of an occurrence.
11Crime Prevention vs. CJS
- The growth of crime prevention has been in
reaction to the perceived failings of the
criminal justice system. - Specifically, the CJS
- has been unable to cope with the actual quantity
of crime - fails to identify many criminal offenders and
bring them to justice - fails to rehabilitate those offenders who are
identified by the criminal justice system - fails to address the underlying factors
associated with crime and criminality - may in fact promote crime through corrections
system
12Crime Prevention vs. CJS
13Problem-Oriented Approach
- Three components to this problem-oriented
approach - Analytical process scope nature of the problem
is identified, predicted and assessed through the
gathering and analysis of relevant information
(SARA Scan, Analyze, Respond, Assess) - Intervention is highly individualized crafted
specifically for the particular (potential)
problem the scope and nature of the intervention
must be appropriate for and commensurate with the
scope and nature of the problem - Alternative/flexible/individualized solutions A
wide range of alternative and flexible solutions
should be considered, emphasizing those that
address root causes
14Problem-Oriented Approach
- Case Study Broadway Street, Green Bay, WI
- Green Bay Police Department
- Scan
- Analyze
- Respond
- Assess
15Dominant Crime Prevention Approaches
- Situational Interventions designed to reduce
the opportunity for crime to occur in a
particular time and place (social and
environmental) - Social Developmental Interventions designed to
prevent the development of criminal potential in
individuals (targeting at-risk children and
youth) - Community Modifying/strengthening behaviour of
residents mobilizing residents to informally
regulate their environment community development
- Policing Community policing (increased
relations with community) and problem-oriented
policing (address causes of crime disorder
problems)
16Institutions
The societal institutions where crime prevention
practices and programs take place
17Exercise 1 Handout
18A Brief History of Crime Prevention
19A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- Pre-industrial era
- Villages regulated through informal social
control - Policing and and civic justice a communal
responsibility - Justice exercised on ad hoc basis by sovereign
- Arbitrary arrest and public, bloody punishment
was main method of social control and justice
20A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- Pre-industrial Era
-
- Statute of Winchester (1285)
- Codified into law the first neighbourhood-based
system of surveillance policing watch and
ward
21A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- Pre-industrial era (significant developments)
- Classical School of Criminology (18th Century)
- concerned with developing rational, systematic,
efficient means of delivering justice - punishment can only be justified if it
accomplishes the exclusion of some greater evil - thus, punishment used to deter and prevent crime
22A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- Pre-industrial Era The London Metro Police
- As societies modernized, urbanized, more
populous, maintaining order became increasingly
difficult - 1829 Creation of London Metropolitan Police
- first modern police force
- the police are the public the public are the
police. - principle objective of policing is prevention of
crime
23A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- Modernity Rise of Positivism (late 19th C.)
- the study of crime became a scientific endeavour
- better understand the nature and causes of crime
- thus, develop better means to address prevent
crime - early developments in positivist criminology
- criminality is the result of a pathology in the
individual - treatment replaces punishment as the aim of CJS
- this gives rise to rehabilitation movement
24A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- Modernity The Chicago School (1930s)
- Focused on the social or group pathology behind
crime the role of social disorganization in
causing crime and disorder - Community development and creating opportunities
for disadvantaged groups is best method of
prevention - Create or reinforce existing local institutions
in disadvantaged neighbourhoods - First developmental approach to crime prevention
25A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- Rise of the Welfare State (Post WW II)
- Increased role of the state in social welfare
- Criminal justice system (formal social control)
wholly eclipses and usurps the community-based
system of informal social control - Growth and intractability of the state-imposed
CJS is unprecedented - Police, not citizens, now have primary
responsibility for crime prevention
26A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- 1960s and early 1970s
- Crime rate and fear of crime increase
dramatically - Loss of confidence in the criminal justice system
- Contemporary crime prevention begins with a
physical design focus - Jane Jacobs (Death and Life of Great American
Cities) - C. Ray Jeffery (CPTED)
- Oscar Newman (Defensible Space)
- Result early crime prevention focused
overwhelmingly on situational measures (crime
place)
27A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- 1970s
- Government policy begins to recognize limitations
of CJS and advocates greater role of citizenry - US Government begins funding crime prevention
research and applied projects - Governments emphasize crucial role of local
collective action, thus giving rise to community
mobilization model - Evaluations begin to show limits of crime
prevention
28A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- 1980s
- Continued emphasis on situational approaches
- Emergence not based on criminological theory, but
practical measures to address ever-increasing
crime rate - Broken windows / zero tolerance
- Reflects realistic approach to crime control
- Reflects emergence of conservatism (Reagan,
Thatcher, Mulroney) limitations of state
intervention, individual responsibility, etc.
29A Brief History of Crime Prevention
- Late 1980/early 1990s
- Preeminence of developmental school of crime
prevention - Offending is part of larger syndrome of
antisocial behaviour that emerges in childhood
and persists into adulthood - This behaviour is the result of a number of risk
factors (upbringing, education, community,
personal pathology) - Early intervention must reduce risk factors and
increase protection factors
30A Brief History of Crime Prevention Conclusion
- CP is not new it has always been a goal of the
CJS, only recently has it been conceptualized as
a unique discipline - CP is tied to broader social and political
developments, as well as new theories of crime
and criminality - CP has come full circle citizenry once again at
the centre - Yet, government CJS approaches still dominate
- No magic bullet crime prevention is not a
panacea