How can we access and/or train individuals in the police to ensure there is the required expertise to use autonomous vehicles, such as drones?

Background

"Mobility is the ability to move to/from locations quickly to prevent, detect or respond, including to access difficult locations safely to maximise intelligence and minimise risk.

Autonomous vehicles, and particularly a combination of drones and fixed-wing unmanned aerial vehicles, offer a faster, safer, cheaper, and more sustainable means of frontline deployment and advanced evidence capture. The National Police Air Service and the National Police Chiefs' Council’s National Lead for Drones have a joint strategy that sets out in detail the technical challenges we must overcome to be able to operate a suite of complementary response options. These relate to concerns over line-of-sight flying, safety, cybersecurity, costs of replacement and maintenance, expertise required to use, and poor battery life. Each of these need to be addressed alongside extensive consultation to ensure policing’s use is understood by the public, considered proportionate, and supported."

Next steps

"We welcome your engagement with our ARIs in the following ways:
• If you have evidence that completely or partly supports or answers one of our ARIs, we invite you to share that with us. For any ongoing research relevant to policing and crime reduction, we encourage you to register your research on the College of Policing’s research projects map, which has been designed to promote collaboration and support requests for participants.
• If you are, or plan to be, carrying out research that relates to one of our ARIs, we’d like to hear about it. While we cannot respond to speculative approaches for research funding, we will where possible act to support your ambitions, including finding you policing partners where possible.
• If you are submitting a funding or grant application that aligns with one of our ARIs, we hope that referencing policing’s ARIs will help to strengthen your case for the possible public impact of the research.
• We will use the ARI document to structure our academic engagement, prioritise events and build new connections with external partners. We will be using our ARIs in our engagement with UKRI, and we will publish any opportunities for funding via our website https://science.police.uk/
Please send any correspondence and questions to csa@npcc.police.uk, including ‘ARI’ in the subject heading."

Source

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

Policing Areas of Research Interest

Related UKRI funded projects


  • Home Office The impact of Connected and Autonomous Vehicles on Policing service delivery UKRI Policy Fellowship

    Each fellowship will last up to 18 months to cover: a 3-month inception phase for set up activity a 12-month placement with the host organisation an impact phase lasting up to 3 months Fellows will co-design projects a...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: Keele University

    Why might this be relevant?

    Partially relevant as it focuses on the impact of Connected and Autonomous Vehicles on Policing service delivery, but does not specifically address training individuals in the police.

  • 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

    Lead research organisation: DIGITAL TRAINING SOLUTIONS LIMITED

    Why might this be relevant?

    Partially relevant as it focuses on enhancing police training for criminal investigations using immersive learning, but does not specifically address training individuals in the police to use autonomous vehicles.

  • Diversifying Drone Stories

    (1) RESEARCH CONTEXT: Following its establishment as a now-iconic warfighting tool, the drone increasingly features in domestic airspace. The domestic drone's meteoric rise is evident in the UK Government's ongoing inves...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: University of Reading

    Why might this be relevant?

    Partially relevant as it examines the impact of domestic drones on policing and security, but does not specifically address training individuals in the police to use autonomous vehicles.

Similar ARIs from other organisations