What works to reduce reoffending for different groups? For example, those with mental health problems, or those repeatedly convicted of low-level offences?

Background

We want to address the causes of reoffending using personalised evidence, live data, and digital services to better target and sequence interventions. To do this we need to build the evidence base that can inform the development of more holistic measures than ‘proven reoffending’, factoring in a broader range of outcomes.

Next steps

We can be contacted at the following email address: evidence_partnerships@justice.gov.uk.

Source

This question was published as part of the set of ARIs in this document:

Areas of research interest

Related UKRI funded projects


  • Make Time Count Today - Reducing criminal reoffending on probation through data analytics, predictive behaviour recognition and optimised interventions

    **Problem Addressed** Crime costs UK economy over £58bn pa, with 1.2mn people convicted annually. Of these, 87% have previous convictions, 60% of released prisoners and 30% on probation reoffend within 12 months. ...

    Funded by: Innovate UK

    Lead research organisation: MAKE TIME COUNT TODAY LTD

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project addresses the causes of reoffending through data analytics, predictive behavior recognition, and targeted interventions, aligning with the goal of reducing reoffending for different groups.

  • Evaluating the long-term impact of Release on Temporary License (ROTL)

    Release on temporary licence (ROTL) provides eligible people currently in prison the opportunity to prepare for resettlement in the community through day or overnight release. The intended impact of ROTL is to reduce reo...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: Queen Mary University of London

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project evaluates the long-term impact of Release on Temporary License (ROTL) and explores how changes in ROTL policy may have influenced reoffending in the long-term.

  • Plymouth Community Justice Court: A Case Study of Problem Solving Interventions, Reducing Re-offending and Public Confidence

    The criminal justice system has over many years introduced a range of initiatives designed to reduce crime and support offenders in their efforts to desist from crime. One recent initiative, originating in the U.S.A and ...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: Plymouth University

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project examines the effectiveness of the Plymouth Community Justice Court in reducing reoffending and public confidence, but does not specifically address the impact on different groups such as those with mental health problems.

  • A multi-cultural comparative study into the influence national level variations have on desistance from crime

    NERC: Jessica Cleary: ES/P000681/1 Using qualitative interviews with participants involved in criminal justice interventions, collected in Québec (Canada) and Scotland prior to the exchange, this project will expl...

    Funded by: UKRI

    Lead research organisation: University of Stirling

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project compares national level factors in Scotland and Québec to examine how they shape processes of desistance from crime, but does not specifically focus on reducing reoffending for different groups.

  • ADR UK Data First Evaluation Fellowship

    Until recently, the large amounts of administrative data routinely collected about offenders as they are moved through the Criminal Justice System have been inaccessible to research. Instead, our understanding has largel...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: University of Surrey

  • Righting recidivism: unlocking the cognitive underpinnings of successful interventions to reduce reoffending

    Recidivism is one of the greatest socio-economic burdens the UK currently faces. At an estimated total cost of £18.1 billion a year, prison re-entry places a substantial burden on the national economy. This exacerb...

    Funded by: FLF

    Lead research organisation: University of Greenwich

  • Enforced alcohol abstinence: does it reduce reoffending?

    Whilst there has been intense focus on illicit drugs and associated violence in crime policy in recent years, alcohol is used to a greater degree and implicated in many more crimes, especially those of violence. Courts a...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: University of Liverpool

  • Still 'living it down'? The old problem of convictions: evaluating the impact of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 after 50 years.

    Over 12.2 million people in the UK - one in six of the population - have some sort of criminal record. Many of these records will be old, since the majority of people who acquired them will have appeared in court only on...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: University of Nottingham

  • Regulating Justice: The Dynamics of Compliance and Breach in Criminal Justice Social Work in Scotland

    Not only does Scotland imprison more people than most European countries, but our prison numbers are also rising despite a fall in crime levels. The Scottish Government is attempting to reduce imprisonment through increa...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: University of Strathclyde

  • Distant Voices: Coming Home

    Distant Voices responds to pressing public policy and political challenges created by huge rises in the numbers of people subject to penal sanctions and by high levels of reoffending. Turning conventional understandings ...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: University of Glasgow

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