Below you will find our most recent research projects from 2019 onwards.
This project seeks to assess the effectiveness of Tameside's initiation of the 'Tameside District Academy'; a 15 week post-tutoring intervention designed to struture the learning and development of new officers and to address training needs and skills gaps in young in service officers' practice.
This project aims to support forces with transformational change to facilitate the implementation of the new NOM model and support investigators throughout their RASSO careers.
This research will evaluate whether the concept of ‘uncomfortable knowledge’ can provide useful insights for thinking about the knowledge/action gap in policing.
Phase 3 of the Tutor Constables research extends the question of how effective current L&D processes are for the professional socialisation and enskilment of new recruits beyond the 'tutor phase'.
This project seeks to explore the relationship between the training delivered for those involved in RASSO investigations, and how these are identified, their learning experiences and officer wellbeing.
This project seeks to make sense of a key factor influencing the success of both the Uplift programme and the PEQF - the Tutor Constable role.
This project aims to deliver a new onboarding map for new recruits joining the police service.
To undertake a systematic literature review and synthesis of the academic literature, along with some policy literature, on the evidence about the design, processes and outcomes of public innovation.
This project seeks to make sense of a key factor influencing the success of both the Uplift programme and the PEQF – the Tutor Constable role.
This project seeks to explore the relationship between the training delivered for those involved in RASSO investigations, and how these are identified, their learning experiences and officer wellbeing.
This project seeks to explore the limited, police specific research in this area and any relevant literature that exists outside of the policing arena.
Exploring the relationship between the learning delivered for rape investigators, their developmental requirements and officer wellbeing.
The aim of the research is to identify what may be learned from the experience of the COVID-19 pandemic.
This project aims to embed the key findings of the OU's action research project on Organisational Learning (3.07).
This project aims to understand better how senior police officers approach working with elected politicians.
This project builds on the work of the completed project 'Implementing the transformation of police learning and development'. This project aims to build on the learning, outcomes and momentum generated in the earlier work's products.
This project looks to understand the culture of the Milton Keynes workforce, so that they can better understand its strengths and weaknesses, and how it can best be delivered for their policing mission.
Exploring and understanding how research evidence from the Centre for Policing Research and Learning is used and knowledge mobilised to improve policing practice
Examines the nature and impact of visible policing through activities and material practices that shapes perceptions of police
Below you will find our archived projects that were conducted from 2014-2018.
This is a major undertaking so the project has been designed as action research – aiming to both understand but also work collaboratively with forces and national agencies to improve the training, learning and development function in police services, both strategically and operationally.
Investigating how forces are addressing mismatches in demand and capacity through changes to policy and practice
Action research programme to understand and improve knowledge/learning development, deployment and dissemination.
This project looked at how police leaders perceive and conceptualise public value, and whether this is different to the views of the public.
A qualitative analysis of policing professionals engagement with the codes of ethics and how this relates to their professional identity and their practice.
This project is part of the Centre's research into ways in which demand can be managed and sustainably reduced.
A qualitative analysis of the stories and accounts of officers who have worked with and under the new policing code of ethics.
This research investigated the concept of crisis, explained how crises can lead to blame and why crisis leadership is a key component of policing.