Top UK police course welcomes Prof’s work on designing out crime

Burglar

Thu, 02 Mar 2017 13:13:00 GMT

Professor Rachel Armitage spoke on the National Police Strategic Command Course – the course is a statutory requirement for officers seeking promotion to Assistant Chief Constable

Professor Rachel Armitage THE senior police training programme, which is a statutory requirement for officers seeking promotion to Assistant Chief Constable, has featured for the first time a module based on a Huddersfield professor’s work on ‘designing out crime’ into its schedule.

College of Policing The National Police Strategic Command Course is the run by the College of Policing and included a presentation on designing out crime by Professor Rachel Armitage, Director of the Secure Societies Institute at the University of Huddersfield.

Professor Armitage (pictured right), whose specialist fields of research also include crime prevention through environmental design, situational crime prevention, CCTV and surveillance, and terrorism, was one of the first speakers at the start of the three-month course.

‌The inclusion of the ‘designing out crime’ module had been arranged by the course deputy directors Helen Ball and Jo Noakes and the national police crime prevention initiative Secured by Design (SBD).

burglar SBD seeks to reduce crime by using proven crime prevention design techniques such as natural surveillance, landscaping and lighting, as well as encouraging manufacturers of products such as doors and windows to meet Police Preferred Specification, which has more stringent requirements than the physical security standards required by the Building Regulations.

Professor Rachel Armitage co-presented the one-and-a-half hour long ‘designing out crime’ session with SBD Development Officer Michael Brooke.

Professor Armitage told delegates that her independent academic research had found that SBD’s design principles and product security standards had achieved significant and sustained reductions in crime on SBD sites compared to non-SBD sites.

“Research conducted at the University of Huddersfield shows that in West Yorkshire the average property experiences almost four times as many burglaries as a property designed to the features of designing out crime,” said Professor Armitage.

“Building in extra security at the design stage typically costs around £170 for a three-bed dwelling – a relatively low cost deterrent to criminality,” she added.

SBD Chief Executive Officer, Guy Ferguson, said: “Professor Armitage and Michael Brooke were well received and generated some excellent questions and contributions from the audience.  It will have focused the delegates about how they can positively apply their learning in practical situations when they become senior leaders of UK police forces.”

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