Colombian's cocaine trade #ESC2025 @uclcrimescience.bsky.social
Colombian's cocaine trade #ESC2025 @uclcrimescience.bsky.social
India’s cybercrime epidemic: victims lose life savings to fake police
Last year Indians lost £1.97bn to cybercriminals posing as inspectors on video calls, with uniforms, sound effects and personalised documents
Long day...
#London
Do cybercriminals weigh risk & reward when picking targets? Stibbe & @nscr-instituut.bsky.social found stolen account posts w/ big rewards got more views, while warnings scared users off. Police Op made admins delete “risky” posts—at first. Over time, that faded.
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
📢 Research Associate Opportunity - NHS Counter-Fraud Project> we're looking to recruit an RA for a NIHR funded project on strengthening counter-fraud across the NHS in England. Details here www.jobs.manchester.ac.uk/Job/JobDetai... #criminology #fraud @criminologyuom.bsky.social @uomsoss.bsky.social
Do our routines increase our risk of re-victimisation in different places? Summer research scholar, Donelle Steer, under the supervision of @lisatompson.bsky.social, looked at variables that approximate routine activities to determine if these are associated with risk of re-victimisation.
Join us for the PhD Open Evening (Security & Crime Science)!
Register now for the event: www.ucl.ac.uk/security-cri...
Asking for a friend...
Less widely know fact: JB contributed to the development of the Thames River Police (1st police station).
Ever wondered how to model hybrid threats? The answer is in this new JASSS paper💫 www.jasss.org/28/1/1.html @uclcrimescience.bsky.social
Public trust in the police is an almost ever-present feature of United Kingdom policy, political and indeed cultural debates, and this has been true right across the past quarter century. Concentrating on the population-level picture, and on England and Wales, in this article I outline what we know about changes in ‘trust and confidence’ over the past two decades or so, and make comparison with changes in other, closely associated, indicators. Why it might be that over this period trust in police first increased significantly, and then declined? Answers to this question implicate what might be termed the political economy of trust. Change in public trust may be due to a whole set of factors operating across multiple levels of policing and the society in which it takes place.
Nice, short summary by my colleague @benbradford.bsky.social of what’s driven changes in public confidence in police (🏴 & 🏴) over the past 25 years. A useful reminder of the factors behind the short-term noise of media coverage.
https://doi.org/10.1177/14613557241298858
For crime science & criminology followers - see my website crimeframeworks.com and please let your colleagues know!
Someone should really be on Twitter, not Bluesky
How to get started with academic Bluesky blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsoci...
We're looking for a lead Quant Analyst to join our team. Interested in a new challenge, or know someone who might be? Feel free to get in touch if you have any questions or apply here: www.crestadvisory.com/post/we-are-...
Implementation failure in Jakarta: local solutions to a global problem