Compstat in Australia: An analysis of the spatial and temporal impact |
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Authors: | Lorraine Mazerolle James McBroom Sacha Rombouts |
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Affiliation: | a ARC CEPS, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Australia, 4072;b Griffith School of Environment, Griffith University, Nathan Campus, 170 Kessels Road Nathan 4111, Brisbane, Australia;c School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Griffith University, Mt Gravatt Campus, Brisbane, Australia, 4111 |
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Abstract: | One of the major trends in policing sweeping across democratic societies since the mid-1990s is a management approach commonly known as COMPSTAT. Despite widespread global adoption, empirical evaluation of the impact of COMPSTAT lags behind popular accounts of its crime control benefits.PurposeThis article evaluates the crime control impact of Queensland Police Service's version of COMPSTAT known as “Operational Performance Reviews” (OPRs).MethodA mixed model analytic approach was used to assess the role of OPRs in explaining spatial and temporal variations in crime patterns across Queensland's 29 police districts.ResultsAnalysis of the impact of OPRs on reported crime (specifically assaults, robberies and unlawful entries) suggests major differences between police districts, and that some districts are driving overall statewide crime reductions, whilst others confound positive effects of implementation of OPRs in Queensland.ConclusionsThe results demonstrate that the crime drop experienced throughout Queensland found in prior research (Mazerolle et al., 2007) is most likely attributable to a small number of police districts. The implication of these findings is that a number of districts could (and should) be called-upon during maturation of Queensland's OPRs to reduce specific crime problems in their districts and facilitate ongoing crime reductions across the state. |
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