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- Publications
- Influence
The Effect of Police Body-Worn Cameras on Use of Force and Citizens’ Complaints Against the Police: A Randomized Controlled Trial
- Barak Ariel, W. Farrar, A. Sutherland
- Medicine
- 1 September 2015
AbstractObjectivePolice use-of-force continues to be a major source of international concern, inviting interest from academics and practitioners alike. Whether justified or unnecessary/excessive, the… Expand
Wearing body cameras increases assaults against officers and does not reduce police use of force: Results from a global multi-site experiment
- Barak Ariel, A. Sutherland, +5 authors R. Henderson
- Engineering, Psychology
- 16 May 2016
Police use of force is at the forefront of public awareness in many countries. Body-worn videos (BWVs) have been proposed as a new way of reducing police use of force, as well as assaults against… Expand
COLLECTIVE EFFICACY, DEPRIVATION AND VIOLENCE IN LONDON
- A. Sutherland, I. Brunton-Smith, J. Jackson
- Psychology
- 1 November 2013
This paper examines the importance of neighbourhood context in explaining violence in London. Exploring in a new context Sampson’s work on the relationship between interdependent spatial patterns of… Expand
“Contagious Accountability”
- Barak Ariel, A. Sutherland, +5 authors R. Henderson
- Medicine, Political Science
- 1 February 2017
The use of body-worn cameras (BWCs) by the police is rising. One proposed effect of BWCs is reducing complaints against police, which assumes that BWCs reduce officer noncompliance with procedures,… Expand
Report: increases in police use of force in the presence of body-worn cameras are driven by officer discretion: a protocol-based subgroup analysis of ten randomized experiments
- Barak Ariel, A. Sutherland, +5 authors Ryan Henderson
- Psychology, Business
- 17 May 2016
ObjectivesOur multisite randomized controlled trial reported that police body-worn cameras (BWCs) had, on average, no effect on recorded incidents of police use of force. In some sites, rates of use… Expand
Revisiting free school meal eligibility as a proxy for pupil socio-economic deprivation
- S. Ilie, A. Sutherland, Anna Vignoles
- Psychology
- 1 April 2017
Whether someone has ever had free school meal (FSM) eligibility over a six-year period is the measure of socio-economic disadvantage currently used in the English school system. It is used to monitor… Expand
Cognitive exposure versus avoidance in patients with chronic pain: Adherence matters
- M.K. Nicholas, A. Asghari, +10 authors C. Brooker
- Psychology, Medicine
- European journal of pain
- 1 March 2014
Behavioural exposure methods can reduce pain‐avoidance behaviours, but outcomes vary. One possible explanation is that patients employ cognitive (experiential) avoidance during behavioural exposure.… Expand
Self-inflicted Deaths in NOMS' Custody Amongst 18–24 Year Olds
- A. Ludlow, B. Schmidt, Thomas D. Akoensi, A. Liebling, C. Giacomantonio, A. Sutherland
- Psychology, Medicine
- 1 July 2015
This Report presents the findings of research into self-inflicted deaths in custody amongst 18–24 year olds in England and Wales. The research was undertaken in five UK prisons, and was commissioned… Expand