Crime prevention should be rational and should be based on the
best possible evidence. Decision-makers should weigh heavily any
available evidence on what works best. How can a program that has
produced no discernable evidence of effectiveness, as shown through
numerous evaluations, be considered for implementation?
Unfortunately, this happens all the time. Evidence-based crime
prevention attempts to overcome this and other obstacles by
ensuring that the best available evidence is considered in any
decision to implement a program designed to prevent crime. This
book is about evidence-based crime prevention.
A project of the Campbell Collaboration Crime and Justice Group,
Preventing Crime brings together the leading scientific evidence on
what works best for a wide range of interventions organized around
four important domains in criminology: at-risk children, offenders,
victims, and places. It is the first book to assess the
effectiveness of criminological interventions using the most
rigorous review methodology of the systematic review. It is an
indispensable guide to the leading scientific evidence on what
works best to prevent crime.
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