Effective crime prevention interventions for implementation by local government
Councils are responsible for a range of services related to crime prevention, including managing public space and building design, providing a range of community services and developing policies that affect local businesses. More recently, there has been increasing pressure on local government to contribute to the delivery of a variety of social services and to engage in social planning.
This comprehensive report is a collaboration between the Crime Prevention Programs (CPP) of the NSW Department of Justice, and the Australian Institute of Criminology (AIC). It is a large-scale systematic review of interventions to prevent a number of crime types identified as priority areas for local councils in New South Wales. Offences such as non-domestic violence related assault, break and enter, car theft, retail theft and malicious damage, were reviewed against specific crime prevention methods.
The AIC provided the NSW CPP with a summary of the evidence in support of interventions for each priority crime type. A number of preferred intervention types were selected that could be implemented by local councils, with the support of the CPP, in areas with a significant crime problem.
The report is available on the AIC website.