1 / 14

The Hampshire Domestic Abuse Experiment Chief Superintendent Scott Chilton

The Hampshire Domestic Abuse Experiment Chief Superintendent Scott Chilton. Domestic abuse - . Global curse – Failing the victims ? Do we know what works ? Specific experiments No systematic review Project CARA Longitudinal study – What can we do with the data ?. What is Project CARA?.

lirit
Télécharger la présentation

The Hampshire Domestic Abuse Experiment Chief Superintendent Scott Chilton

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Hampshire Domestic Abuse Experiment Chief Superintendent Scott Chilton

  2. Domestic abuse - • Global curse – Failing the victims ? • Do we know what works ? • Specific experiments • No systematic review • Project CARA • Longitudinal study – What can we do with the data ?

  3. What is Project CARA? • Randomised Controlled Trial • Home Office/CPS/MOJ and third sector design and support • Domestic Abuse Cases involving Conditional Caution • Comparison of reoffending between offenders subject to offending workshops and those not subject to this condition

  4. Progress to date • Experiment commenced on 13th August 2012 • All data/cases tracked • ‘Sub experiment’ - Victims views • Positives* – Workshop attendance/lack of reoffending/low attrition/positive victim feedback • Negatives – Case flow/eligibility criteria/evidential sufficiency

  5. The CJS Response Taking a year of data in Western Hampshire March 2012/13: • 9432 calls for service* • 2290 arrests • 768 charged *to be data cleansed

  6. Disposals

  7. A New Approach? • Analysis of data has shown that 54% of cases result in no further action (NFA) • No action taken to address offending behaviour • Risk of reoffending increased due to the feeling that offender “got away with it” • Increased police involvement in further offences due to NFA

  8. ‘Nudge’ • Can we encourage NFA’d offenders to participate in workshops by the application of ‘nudge’ principles? • Can a Level 5 RCT be designed to test the effectiveness of this approach?

  9. What is ‘Nudge’? • The nudge principle involves persuasion of individuals to carry out a course of action by highlighting the best option in particular circumstances – in this case workshop attendance. • Primarily practiced by Cabinet Office Behavioural Insights Team in UK • Nudge is based on voluntary decision-making

  10. Progress • Eligibility criteria proposed & pipeline study progressing • 10-case trial to be carried out to ascertain whether offenders will attend voluntarily • If feasible RCT to compare those attending a workshop against those who do not and subsequent reoffending rates

  11. Benefits of ‘Nudge’ • Allows greater numbers of individuals to attend workshops • Evidence* from victims has shown that workshops can change offender behaviour • Workshops will possibly reduce the number of individuals returning to custody for domestic offences after being NFA’d for previous offences

  12. CJS Response • Can and does the CJS respond to domestic abuse as policy intends? • Is reoffending higher or lower depending on outcome of arrest? • Are particular categories (e.g. age group / risk category more likely to reoffend? • Research longitudinal study underway.

  13. Next steps……………. • Project CARA – Evaluation 2014 • Nudge – Feasibility and RCT (NFA’s) • CJS Response Examined – Does the evidence prove that victims are failed? • Pipeline study - using Hampshire data • Domestic Abuse Summit – Evidenced research, victims and policy – Major rethink • Innovation and challenge -Targeting, Testing and Tracking

  14. Thank you

More Related