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Hidden in plain sight : what cost-of-crime research can tell us about investing in police / Paul Heaton.

RAND Reports Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Heaton, Paul, 1978- author.
Contributor:
Rand Safety and Justice (Program), issuing body.
Rand Center on Quality Policing, issuing body.
Rand Corporation, issuing body.
Series:
Occasional paper (Rand Corporation)
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Police--United States--Cost effectiveness.
Police.
Police--United States--Costs.
Crime--Economic aspects--United States.
Crime.
Crime prevention--United States.
Crime prevention.
Community policing--United States.
Community policing.
Law enforcement--United States--Finance.
Law enforcement.
Police--Costs.
United States.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (20 pages) : color illustrations.
Place of Publication:
Santa Monica, CA : RAND Corporation, 2010.
Summary:
Many state and local governments are facing significant fiscal challenges, forcing policymakers to confront difficult trade-offs as they consider how to allocate scarce resources across numerous worthy initiatives. To achieve their policy priorities, it will become increasingly important for policymakers to concentrate resources on programs that can clearly demonstrate that they improve their constituents' quality of life. To identify such programs, cost/benefit analysis can be a powerful tool for objectively adjudicating the merits of particular programs. On the surface, all such programs aim to improve quality of life, but whether they actually achieve -- or will achieve -- what they aim for is another question. Summarizing the existing high-quality academic research on the cost of crime and the effectiveness of police in preventing crime, this paper familiarizes policymakers and practitioners with current research on these issues and demonstrates how this research can be used to better understand the returns to investments in police. It demonstrates a method for comparing the costs of police personnel with the expected benefits generated by those police in terms of reduced crime. Applying the method to several real-world scenarios shows that these investments generate net social benefits. Returns on investments in police personnel are likely to be substantial.

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