Presentation by John Winterdyk Presentation by John Winterdyk Director, Centre for Criminology and Justice Research Director, Centre for Criminology and Justice Research Mount Royal University Mount Royal University Calgary, Alberta, CANADA Calgary, Alberta, CANADA Adjunct professor: St. Thomas Un, Un. of Regina and Polytechnic of Namibia Adjunct professor: St. Thomas Un, Un. of Regina and Polytechnic of Namibia Sept. 22, 2011 Sept. 22, 2011 06/23/22 ESC - Sept. 22-24/11 1
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Presentation by John Winterdyk Director, Centre for Criminology and Justice Research Mount Royal University Calgary, Alberta, CANADA Adjunct professor:
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Presentation by John Winterdyk Presentation by John Winterdyk Director, Centre for Criminology and Justice ResearchDirector, Centre for Criminology and Justice Research
Mount Royal UniversityMount Royal UniversityCalgary, Alberta, CANADACalgary, Alberta, CANADA
Adjunct professor: St. Thomas Un, Un. of Regina and Polytechnic of NamibiaAdjunct professor: St. Thomas Un, Un. of Regina and Polytechnic of Namibia
Sept. 22, 2011Sept. 22, 2011
04/18/23ESC - Sept. 22-24/11 1
What is the Centre for Criminology and Criminal Justice Research (CCJR)?
What theoretical model/assumption? Why is the CCJR involved in supporting social
interventions designed to prevent offending? How is the CCJR attempting to bridge the
implementation gap? How can the CCJR share and expand it scope
and relationship internationally? What lessons learned/to share?
04/18/23ESC - Sept. 22-24/11 2
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The CCJR – why?◦ Established Jan. 2010◦ unique◦ funding◦ Staff
Students, network of advisory/consultants◦ Project scope◦ Political quandary – Omnibus Bill (Sept. 20/11)
04/18/23ESC - Sept. 22-24/11 4
Types:◦ Primary – individual and family levels factors (parenting
skills)◦ Secondary – strategies/techniques to address RISK
factors (police hot spots; social programs – D. Olds prenatal)
◦ Tertiary – after crime occurs (post 9/11 and border security, airport screening)
Addressing offences vs. offending Addressing protective and risk factors
◦ The multiplicity and diversity of the risk factors SROI
◦ Unstable home environment, drugs/crime in the family, extreme economic deprivation…
Community◦ Notable social disorganization…drugs, DV, gangs,
etc.
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Protective factors◦ Positive attitudes, values or beliefs /positive self-esteem◦ Conflict resolution skills ◦ Good mental, physical, spiritual and emotional health ◦ Success at school / steady employment / stable housing◦ Good parenting skills ◦ Strong social supports ◦ Community engagement ◦ Problem-solving skills ◦ Positive adult role models, coaches, mentors ◦ Healthy prenatal and early childhood development ◦ Good peer group/friends /social network◦ Availability of services (social, recreational, cultural, etc.)
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a principles-based method for measuring extra-financial value
UK roots around 2006 (NL also active)◦ BENEFITS: Communication; more effective decisions;
focus on the important; investment mentality; clarity of governance
◦ LIMITATIONS: not everything can be monetized; over-reliance; intensive first time; some outcomes (self-esteem) cannot be monetized
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Safe(r) Communities “brings together provincial & municipal governments + law
enforcement agencies + community groups + the business sector + social agencies to ensure Alberta remains a place where we are all free to live, work and thrive.”◦ 9 prov. ministries!◦ $60+ million over 5 years (SCIF)◦ Seed money to the CCJR◦ Community hearings◦ Report and 32 recommendations
Gang reduction, safe communities, youth at risk Shift to prevention and engage communities
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15+ projects Topics range from:
◦ Human trafficking – better service and support ◦ Identity theft –◦ Bullying -◦ Domestic violence – ◦ Youth gangs – ◦ Dating violence –
Current projects:◦ Teen courts – viable alternative? ◦ Homelessness – impact of by-laws ◦ Human trafficking – ◦ PACT – police and mental health◦ Building Bridges◦ Domestic violence
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!total cost of crime per year $47 billion CDN 1993 Bob Horner report on Crime Prevention
◦ 1% of CJS budget per year towards CP over five years◦ 5% of budget after 5 years…reality!
1996 report by NCPC (National CP Council) ◦ The evidence is conclusive that the most effective
way to prevent crime is to: ensure healthier children, stronger families, better schools, and; more cohesive communities. Crime prevention through social development
(CPSD) is a sound investment.
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Evidence-led practice Integration Partnerships
Responsive to local communities Measurable results
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School age children/youth (multiple risk factors):◦ S4 Project – Start Smart Stay Safe – police, schools boards, &
community partners. A strength based model …build ‘resilience’ universal
Aboriginal and Northern communities◦ 3% of pop. 20+% offender population