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Making Alberta Communities Safer The Challenges of Sustainability Crystal Hincks Impact & Evaluation Research Services Prof. John Winterdyk Dept. of Justice Studies, Mount Royal University
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Overview Crime Prevention Alberta’s Crime Prevention Framework Safe Communities Innovation Fund Lessons Learned from Evaluations Addressing Sustainability
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Crime Prevention Crime prevention refers to the reduction of future risks of crime through actions, initiatives or policies Accomplished through three main actions: ▫ Traditional Methods Law enforcement, courts, corrections ▫ Situational Methods Security precautions, environmental design ▫ Social Development Methods Targeting of at-risk groups
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Risk and Protective Factors RISK FACTORS Anything, including personal behaviours or environmental conditions, that increases the likelihood of criminal involvement ▫ Substance abuse ▫ Mental health issues ▫ Low literacy ▫ Witnesses or experiencing violence ▫ Unemployment ▫ Neighbourhood crime ▫ Family dysfunction ▫ Early anti-social behaviour PROTECTIVE FACTORS A positive influence that can reduce the risk of criminality and improve the lives and safety of individuals ▫ Success at school ▫ Positive parenting ▫ Adult role models ▫ Strong social supports ▫ Steady employment ▫ Stable housing ▫ Access to health, social, recreational and cultural services
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Social Development
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International Successes United Kingdom ▫ 10 hours of activity to 50 of the most at-risk youth ▫ Reduced youth arrests by 65%, expulsions by 30% United States ▫ Incentives for high school completion for youth ▫ Decreased arrests by 72% Canada ▫ Home visits to at-risk mothers- parenting skills taught ▫ Decreased CFS interventions from 25% to 2.3% ▫ Reduced youth arrests by 67%
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Alberta’s Crime Prevention Strategy 2007- Crime Reduction and Safe Communities Task Force ▫ Create a comprehensive, long-term provincial crime prevention strategy ▫ Led by 9 partnering ministries, community partners, and stakeholders Goals: Shift policy focus from enforcement to prevention Collaboration and integration among agencies Align appropriate programs, services, and funding Engage communities and stakeholders Establish Alberta as a leader in crime prevention
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$60 million dollars 88 pilot projects province-wide Various levels of crime prevention 3 year mandate Primary Universal Prevention Entire populations Secondary Targeted Prevention High-risk subgroups Tertiary Indicated Prevention High-risk individuals
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Safe Communities Innovation Fund (SCIF) $60 million dollars 88 pilot projects province-wide Various levels of crime prevention At-risk youth and at-risk families Addictions and mental health Community engagement Aboriginal focused Family violence Sexual violence Offender needs At-risk students Sex-trade workers Homeless populations Gang interventions Community crisis response
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Assessing the Framework Evaluation ▫ Measuring outcomes Inconsistencies in evaluation strategies ▫ Internal/external agencies Methodologies ▫ Social Return on Investment (SROI) Cost-benefit ratio
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Social Return on Investment (SROI) PROS Monetizing social impact Illustrating cost savings Highlighting success Future funding CONS The ratio itself Methodology Proxy accuracy Comparison of programs
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Challenges of Implementation Poor implementation ▫ Changing program managers ▫ Inaccurate budgeting Inconsistent evaluation strategies ▫ Little to no preparation ▫ Uneducated re: methods Inappropriate utilization of SROI ▫ Sustainable funding Failed partnerships ▫ Loss of funding ▫ Changes in mandates
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SCIF Today Recent budget cuts SafeCom still afloat Initiatives gone Is it working? Sustainable funding? ▫ Bridge funding Death by pilot project ▫ Big Brother Impacts ▫ Discontinuation of services ▫ Restart costs ▫ Loss of services to clients
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Future of Alberta’s Framework Continuation of initiatives Suspension of pilot projects Future budgets Partnerships Change in government=unpredictable future Government buy-in
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Thank you! C. Hincks: crystalhincks@gmail.comcrystalhincks@gmail.com J. Winteredyk jwinterdyk@mtroyal.cajwinterdyk@mtroyal.ca
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