Improving how we identify and communicate best practice approaches across law enforcement

Background

We want to be better at learning from other forces and organisations, listening to feedback but also empowering officers and staff to test new ideas, learn, train and share insight so we all excel in our roles. By promoting a creative, open and reflective culture, by experimenting more and innovating, we will, with input from colleagues, partners and the public, improve our service to Londoners.

Next steps

Get in touch with research@met.police.uk

Source

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

Mps areas of research interest final

Related UKRI funded projects


  • An Exploratory Knowledge Exchange Platform for Policing: Exploiting Knowledge Assets, Utilising Data and Piloting Research Co-production

    The project will build a strategic and innovative knowledge exchange and research co-production platform, providing a structured relationship between West Yorkshire Police (WYP), the Office of the PCC for West Yorkshire ...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project aims to improve the ways in which the police use evidence and insights from research, which aligns with the goal of identifying and communicating best practice approaches across law enforcement.

  • Identifying Future Capabilities for Community Policing (KOBAN)

    Across Europe society is changing due to demographic, technological and economic developments. Communities are getting more diverse, both in real life and online. This challenges Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) to engage...

    Funded by: Horizon Europe Guarantee

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project focuses on identifying best practices and improving community policing, aligning with the question's goal.

  • Enhanced immersive learning to support police training for criminal investigations

    From domestic violence through to Cyber-crime, front line Police officers face a complex array of societal challenges daily. Maintaining a training environment that helps better prepare officers for the complexity of mod...

    Funded by: Innovate UK

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project addresses the need for improved police training and decision-making in complex investigative scenarios, aligning with the goal of identifying and communicating best practice approaches across law enforcement.

  • Promoting justice: Professionalising frontline policing with an evidence-based Structured Interview Protocol

    Evidence obtained from victims and witnesses is of critical importance to the criminal justice system. Current interview procedures for eliciting this evidence frequently fall short of best practice, and have not kept pa...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project aims to develop a structured interview protocol to improve the quality of evidence obtained from victims and witnesses, which is relevant to law enforcement but does not directly address the identification and communication of best practice approaches.

  • NCJL Academic Lead

    Across policing and the Home Office there are critical questions that need answering in order to improve criminal justice outcomes. The information exists to answer many of these questions but is hidden within large data...

    Funded by: ESRC

  • Visions of Policing: How Visual Technologies Shape Police Oversight and Training

    New visual technologies including body-worn and cellphone cameras have led to previously unprecedented access to police conduct. Public reaction to the 'new visibility' of use-of-force, crowd control and interrogations h...

    Funded by: ESRC