Cambridge Institute of Criminology

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The Cambridge Institute of Criminology was founded in 1959, with the support of a benefaction from the Wolfson Foundation and the Howard League for Penal Reform. It is part of the University of Cambridge's Faculty of Law, but its multidisciplinary teaching and research staff are also recruited from Sociology, Psychiatry and Psychology. The Institute has a very active programme of funded research on a wide variety of topics - recent projects have included work on criminal careers, community policing, the effectiveness of community penalties, mentally disordered offenders, and incentives-based prison regimes. The Institute's Library, named after Sir Leon Radzinowicz, has one of the world's largest collections relating to crime, criminal justice and related topics.

The Institute offers a number of different courses, including a nine-month taught course in Criminology for the MPhil Degree (the largest full-time postgraduate Criminology course in the UK); a PhD programme; various courses for undergraduate degrees; a MSt/Diploma in Applied Criminology and Police Management (part-time) open to potential chief police officers and personnel working in senior positions within police forces; and a MSt/Diploma in Applied Criminology, Penology and Management (Prison Studies) (part-time) open to senior prison officers; and a Cropwood Fellowship Programme to enable four practitioners a year to participate in a 12 week period of intensive research.

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