Friday, 15 March 2019

Targeting works (which is why ASBOs and PSPOs are ineffective, lazy, divisive policing)


"Broken window" theory (or, to use its pompous operational name, "order maintenance policing") is the idea that lies behind a lot of modern policing including, in the UK anti-social behaviour orders (ASBOs) and public space protection orders (PSPOs):
In essence, Kelling and Wilson argued that latent danger loomed everywhere, and everywhere people’s disorderly impulses needed to be repressed, or else. Their “broken windows theory” didn’t stay theoretical: Also known as order maintenance policing, this tactic propelled an entire generation of policing practice that sought to crack down on minor “quality-of-life” infractions as a way to stem violence.
The problem is that, as research now shows, all this sounds good but doesn't work - a great deal of time and money is invested in the idea that anti-social behaviour (essentially annoying but non-criminal acts) and petty crime are gateway drugs to more serious crime and that we should target deprived areas using aggressive approaches like stop-and-search, arrests for petty misdemeanours and large scale area campaigns. This, in most developed countries, inevitably means targeting areas with concentrations of minority residents (black or Hispanic in the USA, black or South Asian in the UK) leading to understandable allegations of racism and high degrees of mistrust in police and criminal justice.

What Stephen Lurie, Alexis Acevedo, & Kyle Ott have shown is that serious crime (they focus on violent crime) is much more concentrated socially than 'broken window theory" allows:
...in over 20 cities, we found that less than 1 percent of a city’s population—the share involved in what we call “street groups” (gangs, sets, and crews)—is generally connected to over 50 percent of the city’s shootings and homicides. We use “group” as a term inclusive of any social network involved in violence, whether they are hierarchical, formal gangs, or loose neighborhood crews. In city after city, the very small number of people involved in these groups consistently perpetrated and were victimized by the most serious violence.
We are talking about really small numbers of people - Lurie describes how:
This held true even in areas considered chronically “dangerous,” like parts of East Baltimore. There, the group member population totaled only three quarters of a percentage point, even as they were connected to 58.43 percent of homicides. Shootings tend to be even more concentrated than homicides. In Minneapolis, we found that 0.15 percent of the population was determined to be involved in groups, but this population was connected to 53.96 percent of shootings—a proportion over 350 times higher than their population representation.
The conclusion here is that we need to do two things: target resources (policing and other interventions) towards the very small numbers responsible for most of the mayhem, and spend some time explaining to the wider public that 99% of young people living in deprived areas with high crime levels are not criminals or even likely to become criminals. Right now with ASBOs, PSPOs and extensions of stop-and-search we are doing the opposite. These strategies act to give the impression to people in these areas that the police and public authorities do not trust them and consider them likely criminals. It is no surprise, then, that these communities - often minority communities - don't co-operate with the police or other public authorities.

We should scrap ASBOs, PSPOs and the whole structure of anti-social behaviour measures and direct resources towards targeting the small number of (mostly) young men who are responsible for most of the violence, burglary, robbery and assaults in our cities.

....

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

But 1% of a city the size of Bradford is still a helluva lot of people - in London it's about 100,000 'serious crooks', that's a Wembley Stadium full and more.

Of course, when they're in jail they can't be doing it - maybe that's where they should be, and stay there for longer. Yet some idiots claim that jailing them doesn't work. Can't have it both ways.

Shiney said...

And legalise drugs, of course.

We can then use the tax revenue on the profits from the production and sale of those now legal substances, plus the money saved from not waging the 'war on drugs', to treating addiction as a medical rather than a criminal justice problem.

Barman said...

Yes and no...

I don't imagine ASBOs are dished out willy-nilly and I would imagine that those suffering from anti-social behaviour at whatever level would prefer that the perpetrators be more severely punished.

As for the 'hard crime' and gangs, if we know who they are why aren't they being more severely punished? It seems to me that you need to be a serial criminal before the criminal justice system takes you seriously and sends you to jail - and even then for a pitifully short time.

I'm afraid I am of the 'lock em up' mentality...