Happy Reframe Friday! Place based outreach means being present in spaces of high violence, noting trends and turns in locations, where those of highest risk are hanging around. Our team uses connection to places with the goal to connect deeply with people, people farthest from support and those closest to violence. Take a read, and consider this: people tell us through places that they are hurting, what is Canada’s resistance to allocating support to these people, in the places aching the most? #placebasedoutreach #bedifferent
Our article, "Crime, Place, Policy, and Politics" was published recently in Aggression and Violent Behavior. Read the article for free using the link below for the next few weeks. https://lnkd.in/gPetHpqC The article examines 17 systematic reviews of place-based anti-violence strategies, discusses policy implications, and examines obstacles associated with disseminating place-based and other research findings in an era defined by political polarization. There were four key findings: (1) most place-based interventions have statistically significant impacts on crime and violence, (2) these interventions do not substantially displace crime to nearby areas—to the contrary, such areas tend to benefit in terms of crime reduction, (3) the effects associated with these interventions are best described as modest to moderate, and (4) police-based strategies generally have larger effects than those that featuring green space, urban upgrading, or situational crime prevention. This led to four key policy conclusions: (1) policymakers should continue focusing attention and resources on the locations where crime concentrates, (2) in these locations, they should aggregate the individually modest but collectively robust effects of multiple place-based (and other), (3) these strategies should include policing strategies that emphasize community-oriented problem solving, and (4) they should also include select non-enforcement strategies to complement police efforts. Note: we did not examine people-based or other anti-violences strategies in this article - that was not our mandate for this special issue that focused on place. We do not express an opinion on the relative merits of place-, people-, behavior-based, or other strategies. Our conclusions are politically viable: 73% of Americans believe that police funding should remain the same or increase while at the same time 65% believe that social workers can help police reduce crime. Most Americans believe in a combination of enforcement and non-enforcement strategies. To communicate these and other findings effectively to non-scientists, researchers must do so in nonpartisan terms and follow three general principles: synthesis, emphasis, and narrative. This article relies on research from a much broader meta-review of 170+ systematic review of anti-violence strategies that will be completed soon. Review that protocol here: https://lnkd.in/guYY7Nmk Finally, thank you to my fellow authors: David B. Wilson, Catherine Kimbrell, Richard Hahn, and Bill Johnson. Thanks also to the Center for the Study and Practice of Violence Reduction!