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CRIME/DISORDER/ANTI-SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR DATA & GENERAL DATA FOR
PROFILING & ANALYSIS |
|
Source |
Type of Data |
What it will tell you |
Points to note |
Developmental issues |
|
Police |
information
- Command & Control data on non crime incidents
|
- Time, location, type of offences reported to the police
- Known offenders by age, ethnicity, address
- Time, location, type of non-crime offences reported to the
police (around 70% of calls)
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- Levels of reporting vary by crime type
- Offenders often unknown
- Only covers calls to the police
- Crime/anti-social behaviour methods rarely documented
|
- Inconsistent reporting
- Repeat victimisation
recording systems need to be
developed
- Seasonal pattern systems need to be developed & used
|
|
Police Authority |
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- Perceptions of safety and fear of crime
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- Unlikely to be at detailed level
|
- Fear of crime & anti-social behaviour will need to be
tracked
|
|
Local Authority Housing Department/
Registered Social Landlords |
- Racial/
- homophobic
- incidents
- Reasons for transfer applications
- Records of neighbour disputes/
- complaints
- Evictions, injunctions, relating to anti-social behaviour
|
- Costs of crime to social landlords
- Likely to cover high crime neighbourhoods
- Local unease & experience of crime, disorder/anti-social
behaviour & quality of life issues
- Location & nature of main anti-social behaviour problems
- Identify unpopular areas possibly entering spiral of decline
- Identify areas with lack of housing demand
|
- No data on costs of crime/anti-social behaviour to private
landlords & owner-occupiers
- Misses those who don't know it's worth complaining
- Incident logging systems often incomplete
- Hard to obtain information for properties where landlord pays
bills but tenants move in & out
- Completeness of Electoral Register not always good
|
- Inconsistent capture of data
- Past inadequacies - need to increase confidence
|
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Local Authority Social Services Department |
- Information on vulnerable groups (e.g. elderly, people with
disabilities,
mentally ill, child protection)
- Children in care/leaving care
- Information on young offenders
|
- Where to find groups who may be victims of crime (e.g. the
elderly, the mentally ill)
- Understanding of offender behaviour
- Complements police data
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- Concentrates on the most vulnerable & offenders known to
Social Services by age, gender, ethnicity, area where they live
|
- Data might not be easy to analyse
|
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Local Education Authority |
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- Schools where high percentage of pupils are out of school
- Risk factors for offending or being victimised
- Complements police data
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Individual Schools |
|
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- What the school is doing to help
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- Involvement of young people in youth action groups is essential
|
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Local Authority Environmental Services |
- Refuse collection problems
- Health and safety problems
Improvements
|
- Identify 'hot spots'
- Will complement police and housing data
|
- Only covers calls to council
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- Inconsistent reporting & recording
|
|
Local Authority Highways and Street Lighting |
- Location of traffic accidents
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- Safety 'hot spots'
- Simple indicator of where fear of crime is greatest
|
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- Inconsistent reporting, recording
- May be difficult to collate
|
|
Local Authority 'Centre' (Chief Exec./Policy Unit) |
- Needs analysis for external grants
- Records of crime/
- anti-social behaviour
- against staff
|
- Provides local context
- Allows links to be made to 'risk factors' for offending
|
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- Some areas need to develop skills in re-aggregating data to
match new boundaries
|
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Local Authority Planning Department |
- Land use, including dereliction, recreational & business
|
- Can help to display data
- Identifies any changes planned in the environment
- Comprehensive indicator of the make-up of an area down to
small enumeration districts
|
|
- Some areas need to develop skills in re-aggregating data to
match new boundaries
|
|
Probation |
- Offender profiles (e.g. age, gender, employment status;
substance misuse)
|
- Perspective on criminal behaviour & its causes
- Insight into offender motivation
- Responses to intervention
- Locates known offenders
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- Covers only known offenders
|
- Data unlikely to be easy to analyse
|
|
Health Authority |
- A&E records of assault and domestic violence
- Victims of violence treated in primary care
- Mentally disordered offenders
- Information on substance misuse e.g. drugs & alcohol
- Behaviour modification attendee numbers
|
- Likely to cover offences not reported to police
- Levels of substance abuse, age of users, types of drug,
associated risk factors
|
- Sources and locations of injuries not always recorded
- Need to establish link between drugs and offending locally
|
- Data unlikely to be easy to analyse
- Some health authorities have problems getting trusts to
collect or collate required data
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District Health Authority |
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Drug Action Team |
- Information on drug-taking/alcohol & substance misuse
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- Should complement police and health substance misuse data
|
- Likely to have better understanding of links between drugs &
anti-social behaviour/crime
|
- Data unlikely to be easy to analyse
|
|
Youth Offending Teams |
- Youth offending & persistent young offenders data
- Population of the Youth Offending Team Area
remand
- Rates of offending by Looked After Children
- Speed at which youth cases are dealt with through the youth
justice system
|
- Known offenders by age, ethnicity, address
- Concentration of young offenders in geographical area
- Data on effectiveness of intervention
- risk factor analysis
- Efficiency & effectivess
|
|
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Fire Service |
- Incidents of arson; hoax calls and suspicious fires
|
- Patterns of incidents e.g. time, location, type of incident
reported
- Complements police data
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- Some fires go unreported
- Little data on offenders
|
|
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Community Relations Council |
- Incidents of racial attacks and harassment
|
- Patterns of racial crime
- Complements police data
|
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- Data unlikely to be easy to analyse
- Not all victims report incidents to authorities
|
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All public buildings (e.g. schools, hospitals, libraries and
leisure facilities) |
- Costs of criminal damage and vandalism
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- Where major losses occur
- Where investment in prevention could save money
|
- Limited to public buildings
|
- Incomplete/inconsistent capture of this information
|
|
Chamber of Commerce |
- Costs of criminal damage and vandalism to private companies
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- Where major crime/anti-social behaviour losses occur
- Where investment in prevention could save money
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- Limited to those who are members of the chamber of commerce
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- Dependent on whether local chamber of commerce has done such
work or is aware of work in companies
|
|
Chamber of Trade |
- Costs of retail crime, damage and vandalism
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- Where major crime/anti-social behaviour losses occur
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- Limited to those who are members of the chamber of trade
|
- Dependent on whether local chamber of trade has done such work
or is aware of work in companies
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| Employment
Service |
- Adult / youth unemployment data
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- Indicator of important risk factor
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- Only covers those registered as
seeking work
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- Those most at risk of offending may
not be registered
|
| Voluntary &
Other support Services (victim support/gay & lesbian support
groups/mediation schemes) |
- Nature and extent of harassment
- Profile of victims
|
- Age, gender, ethnicity, type
of victimes of crime & disorder.
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- Not all victims report incidents to
authorities
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- Information may be difficult to
analyse
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