November 1, 2017 Research & Evaluation, Research and Evidence The changing shape of street-level heroin and crack supply in England: Commuting, holidaying and cuckooing drug dealers across ‘County lines’ Journal articlesBy Ross Coomber, Leah Moyle Download Street-level drug markets have traditionally been understood as operating predominantly at a local level, and there has been an absence of contemporary research that has challenged accepted thinking around their shape and organization. This article aims to outline an important development in the retail drug supply landscape, analysing a fast evolving and expanding drug supply model that involves ‘outreach’ selling from major supply hubs, direct to heroin/crack users in provincial satellite areas.
December 3, 2021 Research and Evidence The terrifying abyss of insignificance: Marginalisation, mattering and violence between young people By Luke Billingham, Keir Irwin-Rogers AdolescentsEquality Diversity & InclusionPreventionViolenceYoung person's voice
January 1, 2015 Research and Evidence Gang-involved young people – custody and beyond a practitioner’s guide By Fiona Factor, John Pitts, Tim Bateman Criminal justiceGangsMinoritised voices & expertise by experiencePracticeReconfiguration of services
November 13, 2018 Research and Evidence The Black Criminal Other as an Object of Social Control By Patrick Williams, Becky Clarke DisproportionalityGangsRace / ethnicityViolence
October 19, 2018 Research & Evaluation, Research and Evidence Working County Lines: Child Criminal Exploitation and Illicit Drug Dealing in Glasgow and Merseyside By Grace Robinson, Robert McLean, James Densley Child Criminal Exploitation (CCE)County LinesGangsReconfiguration of servicesTrafficking