Ewch i’r prif gynnwys

Professor Mike Maguire

Athro Emeritws Troseddeg a Chyfiawnder Troseddol

Ysgol y Gwyddorau Cymdeithasol

Trosolwyg

Desistance from crime, particularly the resettlement of prisoners.   Specific interest in mentoring and the role of the Third Sector.

Policing and crime control, especially $acirc; targeted$acirc; and $acirc; intelligence led$acirc; policing, $acirc; risk$acirc; based crime control strategies, and partnership between police, criminal justice and other agencies. Research interests have spanned the reasons for these developments, their $acirc; effectiveness$acirc; in relation to crime, and issues of regulation and accountability.

Devolution and crime control. Professor Maguire is Director of the Welsh Centre for Crime and Social Justice which links seven universities in Wales and has close links with the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice.  

Main Research Grants 2001-10

  • 2010   (with Aberystwyth and 3 other Welsh HEIs) Establishment of Welsh Centre for Crime and Social Justice (HEFCW$acirc; s Strategic Development Fund).
  • 2008   (with H. Pierpoint and CRG)   Fine Payment Work Process Study (Ministry of Justice).
  • 2008 (with K. Holloway and ARCS) Evaluation of Transitional Support Scheme (Welsh Assembly Government)
  • 2003-06: South-West Integration Project (various funders)
  • 2002-04: Prisoner Resettlement Pathfinders Phase 2 (Home Office)
  • 2000-03: Targeted Policing (3 projects, Home Office)
  • 1999-02: Prisoner Resettlement Pathfinders Phase 1 (Home Office)

Current Research Projects

Recently completed various studies relating to the resettlement of prisoners, with a special focus on mentoring.   Awaiting results of further bids in this area.   Consultant to a large-scale study on prisoners and mental health (Plymouth University and others).   Also awaiting result of ESRC bid with Edinburgh University on $acirc; Crime control and devolution$acirc; .

Links

Ymchwil

Desistance from crime, particularly the resettlement of prisoners.  Specific interest in mentoring and the role of the Third Sector.

Policing and crime control, especially 'targeted' and 'intelligence led' policing, 'risk' based crime control strategies, and partnership between police, criminal justice and other agencies. Research interests have spanned the reasons for these developments, their 'effectiveness' in relation to crime, and issues of regulation and accountability.

Devolution and crime control. Professor Maguire is Director of the Welsh Centre for Crime and Social Justice which links seven universities in Wales and has close links with the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice. 

Main Research Grants 2001-10

  • 2010  (with Aberystwyth and 3 other Welsh HEIs) Establishment of Welsh Centre for Crime and Social Justice (HEFCW's Strategic Development Fund).
  • 2008  (with H. Pierpoint and CRG)  Fine Payment Work Process Study (Ministry of Justice).
  • 2008 (with K. Holloway and ARCS) Evaluation of Transitional Support Scheme (Welsh Assembly Government)
  • 2003-06: South-West Integration Project (various funders)
  • 2002-04: Prisoner Resettlement Pathfinders Phase 2 (Home Office)
  • 2000-03: Targeted Policing (3 projects, Home Office)
  • 1999-02: Prisoner Resettlement Pathfinders Phase 1 (Home Office)

Current Research Projects

Recently completed various studies relating to the resettlement of prisoners, with a special focus on mentoring.  Awaiting results of further bids in this area.  Consultant to a large-scale study on prisoners and mental health (Plymouth University and others).  Also awaiting result of ESRC bid with Edinburgh University on 'Crime control and devolution'.

Bywgraffiad

Aelodaethau proffesiynol

Professor Maguire is active in a number of national and international fora, both academic and policy-related. In the academic domain, he has been on various ESRC committees, is an Associate Editor of the European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, and of Criminology and Criminal Justice, and is on the Board of the British Journal of Criminology. He co-edits the leading British Criminology textbook, The Oxford Handbook of Criminology, and has edited a successful series of Open University Press texts. He was a co-organiser of the British Criminology Conference. He has also spoken at major international conferences in inter alia the USA, India, Belgium and the Netherlands.  He was a leading partner in a successful inter-institutional bid to HEFCW to set up the Welsh Centre for Crime and Social Justice, and in 2010 became the first Director of the Centre.

In the policy domain, he is a member of the national Correctional Services Accreditation Panel and is an ex-member of the Parole Board of England and Wales. From 2001-2010 he was Senior Academic Advisor to the Home Office Crime Reduction Director in the National Assembly for Wales, and was a member of the South Wales Probation Board between 2001 and 2007. He has sat on high level working parties (eg two set up by JUSTICE and Liberty) and has acted as an expert witness to the Welsh Affairs Committee and other government committees and inquiries. He has been a keynote speaker at major policy-related conferences, including events organized by Victim Support, Europol and the Association of Chief Police Officers. He has contributed to high level practitioner training, is a regular referee of Home Office publications, and has often acted as a consultant to the Home Office and Ministry of Justice. He is a member (formerly Chair) of the Board of Trustees of Safer Wales.  

Selected Presentations

  • Invited paper to 27th Cropwood Roundtable Conference, Cambridge University (2002)
  • Address to Cabinet Office Strategic Futures seminar on alcohol and violence (2003)
  • Plenary speaker, National Conference on Probation, Kent University (2004)
  • Invited paper, ESRC seminar on desistance, Keele University (2004)  
  • Plenary speaker, expert conference on NOMS, Kings College London (2005)
  • Presentation on Resettlement to Home Secretary and Ministers (2006)
  • Invited paper to ESRC Seminar Series on Policing ($acirc; Could and Should the Police Solve More Crime?$acirc; ). (2008) Summary published by ESRC in 2009.
  • Guest public lecture (on the involvement of the Third Sector in crime control), Cambridge Institute of Criminology, Cambridge (2009)
  • Series of six invited lectures to Home Office Regional Offices, Police and Local Authorities on $acirc; Measuring Confidence in the Police$acirc; (London, Leeds, Bristol, Birmingham, Manchester, Cardiff.) (2009).