'Tasers, Terrorism and Interviews: 3 RCTs We Needed': Mia-Maria Magnusson / Syed Hussain / David Lawes and Barak Ariel (audio)

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Description: The Institute of Criminology holds an annual international conference on Evidence Based Policing, Chaired by Professor Lawrence Sherman in association with the Society for Evidence Based Policing (SEBP).

The 11th conference was held at the Sidgwick site at the Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge, on 9-11 July 2018.

This talk: 'Tasers, Terrorism and Interviews: 3 RCTs We Needed'
Chair: Dr. Barak Ariel, University of Cambridge
Mia-Maria Magnusson, Swedish Polisen: 'Can Police Motivate Drug Abusers to Quit? A Randomized Trial'
Syed Hussain, Metropolitan Police: 'Does Police-Guided Corporate Training Prepare Employees for Terrorism?'
David Lawes, City of London Police and Dr. Barak Ariel, Cambridge University: 'Does Taser Availability Increase or Reduce Police Use of Force?'
Discussion: Dr. Barak Ariel

This entry provides an audio source for iTunes.
 
Created: 2018-09-03 10:16
Collection: Institute of Criminology MOVED
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: A.J. Gray
Language: eng (English)
 
Abstract: Mia-Maria Magnusson, Swedish Polisen

Mia- Maria is a PhD student at Malmö University and Institution of Criminology and Police Detective Inspector at the Police Department of Stockholm Region, Sweden.

Syed Hussain, Metropolitan Police

Thesis title: Comparing the effects of large-employer training in Counter-Terrorism Awareness delivered by police trainers to training delivered by employer’s trainers.

Dr Barak Ariel, University of Cambridge and Hebrew University, Jerusalem

Dr Barak Ariel is a Lecturer in Experimental Criminology, a Lecturer in Criminology at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel, and a Jerry Lee Fellow of Experimental Criminology at the Institute of Criminology of the University of Cambridge. Dr Ariel is involved in evaluation research projects with a large number of criminal justice agencies around the world, including the United States, England and Wales, Trinidad and Tobago, Uruguay, Northern Ireland, Costa Rica, and Israel, to name a few. He was the recipient of the Academy of Experimental Criminology Young Experimental Scholar Award for his work in experimental criminology. His main interests include hotspot policing, organised criminal groups, deterrence, interagency collaborations, and technology in policing.
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