Ekblom’s 5Is
INTELLIGENCE – gathering and analysing information on:
- crime and disorder problems and their consequences
- offenders and modus operandi
- causes of crime and (with longer term, developmental prevention) the ‘risk and protective factors’ in young children’s life circumstances associated with later criminality
INTERVENTION – blocking, disrupting or weakening those causes. The interventions cover the entire field:
- acting through both civil prevention and traditional justice/law enforcement
- addressing both situational and offender-oriented causes
- and tackling causation at different levels – immediate ‘molecular’ causes of criminal events, higher-level causes in communities, networks, markets and criminal careers, and remote ‘upstream’ causes influenced by the manipulation of risk and protective factors in children’ early lives
IMPLEMENTATION – converting the intervention principles into practical methods that are:
- customized for the local problem and context
- targeted for offenders, victims, buildings, places and products, for an individual or collective basis
- planned, managed, organized and steered
- monitored and quality assured, with documentation of inputs of human and financial resources, outputs and intermediate outcomes
- assessed for ethical issues
INVOLVEMENT – mobilizing other agencies, companies and individuals to play their part in implementing the intervention, or acting in partnership, because crime prevention professionals must often work through or with others, rather than directly intervening in the causes of crime. In both cases, specifying:
- who was involved
- what broad roles or specific tasks they undertook
- how they were alerted, motivated, empowered or directed (e.g. by publicity campaigns, financial incentives)
- how a broadly supportive climate was created in the community and how hostility was reduced
IMPACT - nature of the evaluation (how the project was assessed, by whom; whether this was a reliable, systematic and independent evaluation; and what kind of evaluation design was used)
- impact results (what worked, how)
- cost-effectiveness, coverage of crime problem, timescale for implementation and impact
- process evaluation (what problems/ trade-offs faced in the implementation, how they were resolved at each stage)
- replicability (which contextual conditions and infrastructure are helpful, or necessary, to successfully replicate this project – or particular elements of it – at each of the 5Is stages)
- learning points – both positive and negative (what to do, what not to do)
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