Crime-Cutting Miracles? - a podcast by BBC Radio 4
from 2011-09-01T19:30
Following the riots the government has been keen to look at initiatives which hold out the promise of preventing violent crime. The Violence Reduction Unit was set up in Glasgow in 2004. The murder rate in the city had been high for generations. The radical idea the VRU had was that, rather than solve violent crime, police should prevent it. Violence is treated like a disease - tough police enforcement goes hand in hand with community initiatives aimed at changing the culture of violence.
Police initiatives in the US also have the same aspiration. Bill Bratton, who will be advising the government, was police commissioner in New York&Los Angeles when violent crime fell dramatically. Mobeen Azhar asks how initiatives, in both Scotland&the US, actually operate&whether they work.
ContributorsCommissioner Bill Bratton
Professor Larry ShermanProfessor Andrew Karmen
Dr Michael MurrayKaryn McCluskey, VRU
DS Steven Kettenhorn, Strathclyde PoliceSuperintendent Bob Hamilton, Strathclyde Police
Angela Morgan, Chief Exec, IncludemCommander Steve Rodhouse, MET
Producer : Rosamund Jones.
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