8th National Crime Mapping Conference
REGISTRATION IS OPEN
Manchester Central Manchester
The National Crime Mapping Conference is designed to appeal to those working in policing, law enforcement, and crime reduction agencies, academia, and also technology companies interested in the benefits of crime mapping for supporting policing and crime reduction.
Comments from previous events:
"Another excellent conference, this is really the only place where crime analysts from such a wide range of organisations come together"
"Very informative and excellent at teaching best practice to fellow practitioners; I'd recommend regular attendance"
"Excellent - all levels of expertise catered for"
"Inspired! It made me want to step outside my comfort zone of the work I usually do"
"It was a useful and informative event; the presentations I attended showcased innovative work from the academic and professional sectors, but kept this practical and useable for the largely 'practitioner' audience"
"Always go away with a feel good factor about the work that is going on in the crime mapping field"
Levels: G = General; B = Beginner; I = Intermediate; A = Advanced
PROVISIONAL FULL PROGRAMME
During our conference planning, the programme is subject to some minor changes.
THURSDAY 10 JUNE 2010
| 9.00-10.15: | Registration, refreshments and exhibition | |
| 10.15-11.30: | 1st PLENARY (G) | |
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| 11.30-11.55: | Break and exhibition | |
| 12.00-13.00: | PARALLEL SESSIONS 1 | |
- The Met's crime mapping website maps.met.police.uk: experiences and lessons learnt. Trevor Adams, Metropolitan Police - Publishing neighbourhood hotspot maps for a low crime area: an approach using kernel density estimation and nearest neighbour analysis. Holly Farrow, Cath Blake, Buckinghamshire Community safety Partnership, and Spencer Chainey UCL Jill Dando Institute. |
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- Developing an evidence base for tracking risk and protective factors of community cohesion in the London Borough of Hillingdon. Neil Mackin, CACI and Pam Nash, LB Hillngdon - Spatial profiles of street crimes: exploring multidimensional data analysis to identify crime patterns in a context of social inequality. Circe Monteiro, Mauro Barros Filho, Carolina Puttini, and Antonio Roazzi. Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil. |
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Ian Laverty, ECRI, Canada |
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| 13.00-14.00: | Lunch and exhibition | |
| 14.05-15.05: | PARALLEL SESSIONS 2 | |
- What police activity influences public confidence? Results from London. Paul Richards, University College London Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis - Towards crime perception maps: automatically extracting quantitative results from qualitative questionnaire responses. Jon Whittle, Will Simm, Marie Angela Ferrario, Baseerit Nasa and Jane Binner, Lancaster University |
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- A three year ASB analysis study in West Sussex: the findings and implications for resource planning. Michelle Peckham, West Sussex County Community Safety Partnership Analysis. - Project Progress: an enhanced ASB patrol strategy Peter Robins, Liam Merrick and Melissa Gregory, West Mercia Police. |
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| 15.05-15.35: | Break and exhibition | |
| 15.40-16.40: | PARALLEL SESSIONS 3 | |
- Internal crime mapping in the Met: trying to catch up with CSI. Carly Mellin, Metropolitan Police. - Harnessing the power of automated data (and letting analysts be analysts). Stephen Postlethwaite, Safer Hampshire Partnership |
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- GIS in offender management crime pattern analysis. Aidan Stephenson, West Berkshire Safer Communities Partnership - Suspect matching using spatial and contextual aspects. Rob van der Veer, Sentient, The Netherlands. |
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| 16.40 | Drinks reception and canapés | |
FRIDAY 11 JUNE 2010
| 9.15-9.45: | Refreshments and exhibition | |
| 9.45-10.45: | PARALLEL SESSIONS 4 | |
- Operation Monica: tackling crime and ASB along bus routes in Bromley. Stuart Dean, Bromley Safer Transport - Mapping emerging communities in Warwickshire. Becki Brookes, Warwickshire Police. |
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- A comparison between repeats and non-repeat residential burglaries: what is significantly different? Lorena Montoya and Marianne Junger, University of Twente, The Netherlands. - A spatio-temporal analysis of near repeat victimisation in Japan. George Kikuchi, Mamoru Amemiya, Takahito Shimada, Tomonori Saito and Yutaka Harada, National Research Institute of Police Science, Japan. |
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| 10.45-11.15: | Break and exhibition | |
| 11.20-12.20: | PARALLEL SESSIONS 5 | |
- What police activity influences public confidence? Results from London. Paul Richards, University College London Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis - Towards crime perception maps: automatically extracting quantitative results from qualitative questionnaire responses. Will Simm, Marie Angela Ferrario, Baseerit Nasa, Jane Binner and Jon Whittle, Lancaster University |
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- A 5WH approach to reducing crime and disorder. Clare Tector, Leicestershire Constabulary - Safer Schools Partnerships: sharing the learning experience. Helen Hodges, Safer Birmingham Partnership |
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| Neil Trainor, National Policing Improvement Agency | ||
| 12.20-13.20: | Lunch and exhibition | |
| 13.25-14.45: | 2nd PLENARY - EXPERIMENTS IN TARGETING HOTSPOTS (G) | |
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| 14.50 |
Conference prizes |
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| 15.05 |
Close |
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| POSTERS | ||
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Phone numbers below no longer work and we can not access the code to change it! Telephone number for conference enquiries is 020 3108 3062.