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Closed-circuit television surveillance and crime prevention

A systematic review

Closed circuit television surveillance is a commonly used and equally commonly debated method for preventing crime. This report presents a systematic meta-analysis of the effects of CCTV surveillance.

About the publication

Author
Brandon C. Welsh, David P. Farrington
Other information
© Brottsförebyggande rådet 2008
urn:nbn:se:bra-308

About the study

Systematic meta-analyses are one means of helping people to pick their way through the jungle of research findings. Meta-analyses combine a large number of evaluations from several countries that are considered to satisfy a list of empirical criteria for measuring effects as reliably as possible. The results of these evaluations are then used to calculate and produce an overall picture of the effects that a given measure does and does not produce. Such studies are also valuable in relation to attempts to assess the circumstances in which a certain measure works. Meta-analyses aim to systematically combine the results from a large number of studies in order to produce a more reliable overview of the opportunities and limitations associated with a given crime prevention strategy.

The Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention (Brå) has therefore initiated the publication of a series of meta-analyses, in the context of which internationally renowned researchers are commissioned to perform the studies on our behalf. In this study, Brandon C. Welsh and David P. Farrington have carried out a meta-analysis of the effects of closed circuit television surveillance based on 41 evaluations from five different countries.

David P. Farrington, Ph.D., is Professor of Psychological Criminology in the Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge.

Brandon C. Welsh, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, University of Massachusetts Lowell.