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PAT MAYHEW

PAT MAYHEW. DEVELOPMENT OF MONITORING INSTRUMENTS FOR JUDICIAL AND LAW ENFORCEMENT INSTITUTIONS IN THE WESTERN BALKANS PHASE 3 – POLICE TRAINING Skopje, 20th – 22nd September 2010. SESSION 1. Introductions Where this training fits into the CARDS Project How the sessions are organised.

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PAT MAYHEW

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  1. PAT MAYHEW DEVELOPMENT OF MONITORING INSTRUMENTS FOR JUDICIAL AND LAW ENFORCEMENT INSTITUTIONS IN THE WESTERN BALKANS PHASE 3 – POLICE TRAINING Skopje, 20th – 22nd September 2010

  2. SESSION 1 • Introductions • Where this training fits into the CARDS Project • How the sessions are organised

  3. MY BACKGROUND • Now retired – freelance consultant • Previously Director of Crime and Justice Research Centre, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand • Consultant Criminologist, Autralian Institute of Criminology • Research Fellow, National Intitute of Justice, USA • Most of career – Home Office Research, Development and Statistics Directorate • Managing and doing research • Ran the British Crime Survey • Responsible for statistics on police-recorded crime • And other police figures - e.g. detections, arrests, police manpower

  4. INTRODUCTIONS FROM PARTICIPANTS

  5. STRENGTHENING JUSTICE & HOME AFFAIRS STATISTICS IN THE WESTERN BALKANS

  6. THE THREE PHASES: PHASE 1 (RESEARCH) • Set out relevant international standards and EU acquis • Picture of the strengths & weaknesses of data collection systems • Identify gaps and needs of statistical systems • It involved: • Desktop research • 7 research missions • One output: • Technical Assessment Reports for 7 countries / territories

  7. PHASE 2: GUIDELINES • To identify common data collection challenges • To discuss and adopt specific draft programme guidelines • To agree a set of regional indicators • To prioritise training needs and adopt outlines of training programmes • It involved: • Preparation of draft Programme Guidelines • Feedback from project countries / territories • Discussion and adoption at First Regional Workshop • One output: • Programme Guidelines adopted

  8. PHASE 3: TRAINING • To design and deliver targeted training activities • To improve national capacities to record and report JHA statistics in line with international standards and EU acquis • To identify areas for further work and improvements • It involves: • Training to be carried out by international experts together with national focal points and national counterparts • Training delivered to police, prosecution, courts, and institutions in areas of migration / asylum / visa

  9. FIRST REGIONAL WORKSHOP (SKOPJE, MAY 2010) • Goals • To present the technical assessment reports • To identify common data collection challenges • To adopt specific draft guidelines • To prioritise training needs • To adopt the outlines of the training program • To agree on a set of regional indicators

  10. CHALLENGES OF THE CCJ STATISTICAL SYSTEM IN THE WESTERN BALKANS • Developing person-based systems • Developing better computerised systems to record data • Assigning a unique Integrated File Number (IFN) to person-records in order to track persons across the whole CCJ system • Defining clear written counting rules to record crime incidents • Training all responsible staff with regard to implementation • Enhancing statistical analysis of the data collected • Improving public dissemination of the data collected • I WILL DEAL WITH SOME BUT NOT ALL OF THESE ISSUES

  11. RECOMMENDATIONS FROM THE PROGRAMME GUIDELINES

  12. SESSION 2: OVERVIEW OF REPORTS OF POLICE DATA AT INTERNATIONAL & NATIONAL LEVEL • The need for valid data and common standards – some preaching! • Main international compilations of police figures • Two examples of national reports • England & Wales • New Zealand • Introduction to suggested Regional Indicators and Pilot Data Collection Exercise

  13. THE NEED FOR VALID STATISTICS • For knowledge-based crime policy.... • You need to know ‘the facts’ • To interpret your knowledge.... • You need to compare across years, and across countries • To compare.... • Your data need to be comparable within your own jurisdiction over time, and – ideally – with other jurisdictions • To be comparable.... • Means that common standards have been applied – within the jurisdiction, and over time, and – ideally – the same as other jurisdictions • Based on Kauko Aromaa (HEUNI)

  14. COMMON STANDARDS • Work developing fast within the UN and the EU • Guidance manuals from the UN and EU (massive!) • But there are considerable difficulties in reaching comparability because of: • Different legal frameworks and definitions of offences • Different policing and prosecutorial arrangements • Differing capacities in criminal justice agencies • Different operational requirements that the statistics serve • Different counting rules (Session 4)

  15. INTERNATIONAL REPORTS • Not very long-standing • All come with substantial caveats • World Health Organisation – covers violence (probably least comparable) • United Nations Survey on Crime Trends and the Operation of the Criminal Justice System (UN – CTS) • European Sourcebook • Eurostat: Statistics in Focus – Crime and Criminal Justice

  16. UNITED NATIONS

  17. EUROPEAN SOURCEBOOK

  18. EUROSTAT

  19. NATIONAL REPORTS • Massive variety of styles • Usually annual • Sometimes with other criminal justice system information; sometimes not • Sometimes with special topics; sometimes not • USA – ‘Index’ crimes only • Now usually available on the web • Data sometimes downloadable

  20. ENGLAND & WALES

  21. ENGLAND & WALES (2) • Latest publication covers: • Extent of and trends in crime • Violent and sexual crimes • Acquisitive and other property crime • Publications perceptions • Detection of crime • Geographic patterns of crime Most chapters draw on police figures and British Crime Survey Discontinuance in police figures • Major changes in offence coverage in 1998 • e.g., minor assaults • Also changes in police recording practices • e.g., counting by victims

  22. NEW ZEALAND

  23. NEW ZEALAND (2)

  24. SUGGESTED REGIONAL INDICATORS (1)

  25. SUGGESTED REGIONAL INDICATORS (2)

  26. SUGGESTED REGIONAL INDICATORS (3)

  27. OFFENCES FOR THE REGIONAL INDICATORS • The following offence types are considered as core crimes to be covered in the 12th UN Survey by the end of 2010: • Intentional Homicide • Violent Crime • Assault • Sexual Violence • Rape • Robbery • Property Crime • Theft • Motor Vehicle Theft • Burglary • Domestic Burglary/Housebreaking • Drug Possession/Use • Drug Trafficking • Kidnapping for Ransom

  28. SESSION 3: TABLES AND ANALYSIS IN MACEDONIA POLICE REPORTS • What tables cause most problems? • How could these problems be best solved? • What tables are most needed, used, and liked? • Are there tables not used or liked? • How do the tables meet the requirements of the suggested Regional Indicators and the Pilot Data Collection Exercise?

  29. SESSION 4: PARTICULAR ISSUED FROM THE RECOMMENDATIONS • The Principle Offence Rule (Recommendation 3) • Multiple offences and suspects (Recommendation 3) • Training implications • Victim-offender relationships (Recommendation 1) • Ethnicity of offenders and victims (Recommendation 1)

  30. COUNTING RULES IN POLICE STATISTICS “…. the rules applied in each country to count offences included in crime statistics. Such rules vary … hence introducing differences in recorded crime rates that do not reflect actual differences in the levels of crime”. Aebi 2003, p. 1. What we know is that there are NO CONSISTENT counting rules across the Western Balkans, or across other countries However, there is ‘best practice’ guidance

  31. THE PRINCIPLE OFFENCE RULE (POR) • International guidelines suggest it may be appropriate to apply a POR when counting and reporting offences. • Written counting rules should say whether a POR rule is applied or not • In the Western Balkand, only Albania applies a POR • In other Western countries, about half apply a POR, and half do not • The main thing is to know (if there is no POR, the crime count is higher) • Ideally,the POR should be consistent across agencies – police, prosecutors, courts • BUT changing to a POR will reduce the crime count, and cause a ‘break’ in the crime statistics series

  32. THE PRINCIPLE OFFENCE RULE - EXAMPLE

  33. MULTIPLE OFFENDERS / SUSPECTS If there is more than one offender involved in an offence, six of the Western Balkans countries count one offence (including Macedonia) In one country, the number of offences = the number of offenders In terms of suspects, it is reasonable to count two

  34. MULTIPLE OFFENCES • What happens when a victim reports more than one offence at the same time? For example, different incidents of domestic violence... • In all the Western Balkans, the rules are that all offences are counted, with the exception of Albania • The important thing is for the rules to be understood and consistently applied

  35. TRAINING IMPLICATIONS

  36. VICTIM-OFFENDER RELATIONSHIPS • The primary interest is in: • People known to each other >>> not known to each other • Important for ‘stranger violence’ • People who are (or were) partners (‘partner violence’) • Violence by ex-partners seen as important as violence by current partners • People who are in a domestic relationship ranging wider than partners (‘domestic violence’) • There are several possible classifications

  37. VICTIM-OFFENDER RELATIONSHIPS (2) INTERNATIONAL CRIME VICTIMISATION SURVEY 1 SPOUSE, PARTNER (AT THE TIME) 2 EX-SPOUSE, EX-PARTNER (AT THE TIME) 3 BOYFRIEND (AT THE TIME) 4 EX-BOYFRIEND (AT THE TIME) 5 RELATIVE 6 CLOSE FRIEND 7 SOMEONE HE/SHE WORKS/WORKED WITH 8 NONE OF THESE 9 REFUSES TO SAY

  38. VICTIM-OFFENDER RELATIONSHIPS (3) UN MANUAL FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF A SYSTEM OF CRRIMINAL JUSTICE STATISTICS (pp. 55 AND 60)

  39. ETHNICITY Used for example for ‘Reported Adult Perpetrators’ Macedonian Albanian Turks Vlachs Serbs Bosniacs Other (1%) Unknown (3%)

  40. OFFENCES RELEVANT FOR THE PILOT DATA COLLECTION EXERCISE • All offences • Completed Intentional Homicide • Violent Crime • Assault • Sexual Violence • Rape • Robbery • Drug Trafficking • Drug Possession/Use • Migrants Smuggling • Trafficking in persons • Total corruption offences • Passive Bribery

  41. INFORMATION TO BE COLLECTED IN THE PILOT DATA COLLECTION EXERCISE • Number of offences recorded by the police, by offence type • Number of persons recorded by the police as suspects, by offence type • Profile of persons recorded by the police as suspects, by offence type and • Sex • Age • Citizenship • Ethnicity • Recidivism • Victim-offender relationship, by offence type • Profile of victims recorded by the police, by offence type and • Sex • Age • Citizenship • Ethnicity

  42. SESSION 6: PUBLICATION OF RESULTS, ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION • What types of publication are feasible? • What frequency of publication is feasible? • Matching different user requirements • What types of analysis are best? What are feasible? • The type and amount of analysis and interpretation

  43. SESSION 7: VICTIMISATION SURVEYS • The purposes of victimisation surveys • Strengths and weaknesses • Three international comparative exercises • International Crime Victimisation Survey (ICVS) • ICVS-11 • Eurostat survey in 2013 • Western Balkans Corruption Survey

  44. VICTIMISATION SURVEYS (1) • Developed since 1970s (USA, Netherlands, Scandinavia) • Many countries now have their own ‘bespoke’ surveys • which have run for many years • providing an independent measure of trends in crime • These bespoke surveys are not very comparable • e.g., Differences in offence coverage • Counting rules! • Some international surveys (later)

  45. VICTIMISATION SURVEYS (2) • Focus on individuals and their direct experience of crime • Whether or nor reported to the police • Thus providing an independent measure of crime • Good for describing the nature of everyday experience of victimisation • Can show which types of people are most at risk (by collecting socio-demographic information • Use sample survey methodology – mainly to get representative samples • Household surveys most common, but there are also • Surveys of businesses • Generally take up other crime-related topics – e.g., fear of crime, security precautions, attitudes to the police

  46. VICTIMISATION SURVEYS (3) • Sometimes focus on particular groups • e.g., women, ethnic minorities • Sometimes focus on particular types of crime • e.g., domestic violence, sexual victimisation • Usually measure victimisation over the last year (but sometimes longer) • Many countries have their own ‘bespoke’ surveys • Which have run for many years – providing independent measure of trends in crime • These bespoke surveys are not very comparable • e.g., Differences in offence coverage • Counting rules!

  47. VICTIMISATION SURVEYS (LIMITATIONS) • Can’t cover all crimes • murder (obviously) • Fraud • victimisation of children difficult • Non-response can be high • Are non-responders different? • Do respondents remember everything? Minor offences likely to be forgotten • Do respondents tell interviewers everything? (Domestic violence) • Sampling error • Problematic for more uncommon crimes (e.g., robbery)

  48. VICTIMISATION SURVEYS (METHODS) • Face-to-face interviews were ‘gold standard’ – but expensive • Computer technology - made a big difference • CAPI – Computer Assisted Personal Interviewing • CATI – Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing • Cheap, but limits interview length • Increasing mobile phone ownership posing a problem • CASI – Computer Assisted Self Interviewing • Good for sensitive subjects • Postal questionnaires uncommon • Cheap but poor response • Internet surveys in development – Computer Assister Web Interviewing (CAWI) • But will need lots of testing

  49. INTERNATIONAL VICTIMISATION SURVEYS • Set up because independent surveys not comparable • Meant to use identical questionnaires • Same analysis methods • A few international business surveys • Some international surveys on violence against women • but some lack of comparability – e.g. WHO

  50. THE MAIN ONES

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