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Date: November 25, 2024 Mon

Time: 8:26 pm

Results for public evaluation

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Author: Turner, Liz

Title: Report 5: Final Report on the Empirical Research

Summary: Public confidence is believed to make a vital contribution to the likelihood that individuals will engage with the CJS by reporting crime and acting as witnesses. It is a priority for Local Criminal Justice Boards (LCJBs) (see PSA 24, Indicator 21) and is measured using a suite of indicators included in the British Crime Survey (BCS). This research aims to challenge existing approaches to thinking about confidence by asking whether the conceptualisation and operationalisation of confidence are 'fit for purpose' in respect of the twin objectives of: (i) gauging public evaluations of the CJS, and (ii) providing an indication of the willingness of members of the public to engage with the CJS. The analytical framework for the analysis distinguishes between the objects of confidence (outcomes, actions and attributes of the CJS), the conditions for confidence (person characteristics, exposure to information, interpretations of that information) and the impacts of confidence on behaviour (willingness to engage with the CJS).

Details: Necastle upon Tyne, England: Newcastle University, School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology, 2010(?), 102p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed May 28, 2019 at: http://criminaljusticeresearch.ncl.ac.uk/index_files/All_Reports/5_FinalReportontheEmpiricalResearch.pdf

Year: 2010

Country: United Kingdom

URL: http://criminaljusticeresearch.ncl.ac.uk/index_files/All_Reports/5_FinalReportontheEmpiricalResearch.pdf

Shelf Number: 156078

Keywords:
Community Engagement
Empirical Research
Local Criminal Justice Boards
Public Confidence
Public Evaluation