How a decline in drink-driving becomes an increase
A press release from the Association of Chief Police Officers attracted a lot of attention this morning.
Nigel Hawkes :: Wed 8th Feb 2012
Nigel Hawkes :: Fri 3rd Feb 2012
Nigel Hawkes :: Thu 26th Jan 2012
Nigel Hawkes :: Wed 1st Feb 2012
Nigel Hawkes :: Mon 16th Jan 2012
Nigel Hawkes :: Fri 13th Jan 2012
Fri 10th Dec 2010
Thu 5th Aug 2010
Wed 26th May 2010
A press release from the Association of Chief Police Officers attracted a lot of attention this morning.
I'm grateful to correspondents on Straight Statistics who pointed out that the the way "confidence in police" was scored in the national Police Improvement Agency's (NPIA) randomized tria
Last week the National Police Improvement Agency (NPIA) published the results of a very large randomized controlled trial (RCT).
The Office for National Statistics and the UK Statistics Authority are prepared to defend the confidentiality of Census information to the limits of the law.
No sooner are they in power than the Tories give us all a fright over law and order.
The police are failing to take anti-social behaviour seriously and to record information about it adequately, according to the Chief Inspector of Constabulary, Denis O’Connor.
Baroness Stern, charged by Harriet Harman to conduct a review into the way rape cases are handled, told the Evening Standard that being drunk was no defence. For the man, that is: she seems to take a different view of drunken women.
People are being arrested simply so that their DNA profiles can be recorded on the national database, according to the Chairman of the Human Genetics Commission, Professor Jonathan Montgomery.
This week the Statistics Authority published a critical assessment of road casualty statistics.