An investigation of how crime, physical disorder and antisocial behaviour – together with the responses to these problems – shape the ways that places change over time.
This report looks at the impact of security and insecurity on the ways urban neighbourhoods change, and analyses the factors that create security and insecurity. It uses data from four of the sixteen trial sites for the National Reassurance Policing Programme that ran in England between April 2003 and March 2005.
The report shows how interventions to deal with crime and disorder at neighbourhood level can be divided into those:
The authors argue that enhancing neighbourhood security depends upon these interventions being matched to the specific needs of individual areas. They suggest a framework for better understanding such issues and what can be done to address them.
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Understanding how crime, disorder, fear of crime and the responses to these problems affect neighbourhood perceptions of safety and security is central to transforming neighbourhoods. This study, by Martin Innes and Vanessa Jones of the University of Surrey, establishes an innovative framework for understanding what factors affect neighbourhood security and insecurity and how these influence the way urban neighbourhoods change. The research shows that:
This study aims to increase our understanding of how crime and disorder, fear of crime, and attempts to control unsocial behaviour affect neighbourhood perceptions of safety and security, so that this understanding can inform ways of transforming neighbourhoods.
The study used the following definitions:
The study is based on data from interviews drawn from four of the 16 trial sites for the National Reassurance Policing Programme that ran throughout England between April 2003 and March 2005.
From analysing the interviews, the researchers developed the ‘3Rs framework’ of risk, resilience and recovery factors:
These are problems or conditions that generate insecurity and increase the likelihood of an area entering a process of decay and decline. The interviews show that:
“I’m nervous about going out when it’s getting near evening, and starting to get dark or whatever, because there is a lot of people what take drugs on the estate, there’s a lot of teenage children in a group that fuel each other, so I’m worried about getting mugged or just generally being followed, it’s a nervous place to be to be honest…” (Interviewee, Blackpool)
“That’s another problem we have, graffiti, but down in this area here, it’s on the walls, whites keep out … They have it up here, Pakis keep out.” (Interviewee, Oldham)
These factors enable some places to withstand and mitigate the risks and threats to which they are exposed. The analysis suggests that:
“I think it’s the whole atmosphere living in the Glodwick. Everyone knows everyone, so you’re not a stranger in your own town. And you just feel so safe, just in your own street and your own area.” (Interviewee, Oldham)
These promote and propagate enhanced security and so contribute to an overall material improvement in a neighbourhood’s situation. Processes of neighbourhood recovery have been studied less than processes of decline. However, a detailed case study shows that policing, if undertaken in collaboration with communities, can contribute to inducing recovery in an area.
“I think it’s brilliant, yeah, because I do think it’s actually bringing the community together now. I mean before it was all disarray, there was no order and you just, you sort of walked about, kept your head down and that were it. You got on with it, you know, but now it’s different.” (Interviewee, Blackpool)
There are two interlinked ways of addressing issues of risk, resilience and recovery in neighbourhoods:
In regulating troublesome or problematic behaviour, ‘control signals’ positively influence perceptions about the ability to protect and defend social order. They play a part in stimulating a linked sequence of events leading to informal community control being strengthened and emboldened. As such, the connections between the provision of formal and informal social control at the neighbourhood level are crucial. The provision of Neighbourhood Policing and other related initiatives has the greatest and most sustainable impact when it augments a community’s informal social control resources. Concentrating only on measures managed by police can be misleading. The police do not guarantee neighbourhood order and security. They can intervene when the social order that is ordinarily maintained by the norms, rules and conventions of everyday interactions in neighbourhoods has been breached or threatened. But ultimately, formal social control can only ever be part of the solution, rather than the whole solution.
Identifying the different risk, resilience and recovery factors suggests that there is no single way of improving neighbourhood security. In some places, acting in support of neighbourhood security may require targeting those ‘signal’ crimes and forms of disorder that increase risk by destabilising the security of residents. In a different area, it may be more effective for the authorities to try and bolster the resilience that is already present in local neighbourhood networks. In other areas the aim may be to stimulate recovery; under such conditions, it may be necessary to establish a basic level of neighbourhood security before investing significant sums of regeneration funding or undertaking other social policy initiatives. Without adequate levels of neighbourhood security, the likelihood of transforming the prospects of these places through such mechanisms is significantly reduced.
Drawing on the development and application of the 3Rs framework, the researchers conclude that:
Typically, current intervention programmes in this field tend to subject all participating areas to fairly similar treatments in an effort to manufacture fairly common outcomes. This research suggests, however, that the safety and security needs of individual urban neighbourhoods may be different and thus ways for generating improvements may also need to vary.
The researchers conclude that the starting point for any programme should be establishing what the needs are in each area (reducing the risk factors; promoting resilience; or stimulating recovery) and then tailoring interventions to local conditions. Although initially more complex, this may significantly reduce the probability of interventions failing; currently this often happens because the intervention programme simply was not suited to the specifics of a local situation.
The ‘3Rs framework’ of risk, resilience and recovery also constitutes a markedly different approach to the Government’s Respect agenda. The Respect programme focuses efforts upon problematic individuals predicted to have persistent high-rate offending careers that harm the quality of life in some neighbourhoods. However, additional measures will also be required to address the conduct of other individuals who are involved in causing problems. The intensive, targeted interventions under the Respect programme may affect issues in a small number of acute problem neighbourhoods but the financial and human resource requirements mean they cannot operate on a large scale. Consequently, in terms of tackling the lower-level chronic problems of crime and anti-social behaviour to be found in many neighbourhoods, promoting community resilience and manufacturing recovery may be more practicable and sustainable solutions.
The research was conducted by Martin Innes and Vanessa Jones of the University of Surrey. It was based upon data originally collected in four of the 16 wards involved in the National Reassurance Policing Programme (NRPP). The wards are:
The project is based upon a secondary analysis of data originally collected as part of the NRPP. It is based upon data from two key sources: