Gloria Laycock

Gloria Laycock, OBE
Born New Brighton, Merseyside
Occupation Director, Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science, University College London
Website
Jill Dando Institute
UCL Centre for Security & Crime
University College London

Gloria Laycock, OBE, is Director of the Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science at University College London (UCL), and runs UCL's Centre for Security & Crime Science. She is an internationally renowned expert in crime prevention, and especially situational approaches which seek to design out situations which provoke crime.

She was born in New Brighton and raised in Liverpool, England, and graduated in Psychology from UCL in 1968. She began her career as a prison psychologist, and in 1975 she completed her PhD, working at Wormwood Scrubs prison in west London. Building on her PhD research, she commenced work in the late 1970s at the Home Office Research Unit where she stayed for over thirty years, dedicating the last twenty to research and development in the policing and crime prevention fields.

She founded the Home Office Police Research Group, and edited its publications on policing and crime prevention for seven years. Alongside working in Britain, she has been a consultant on policing and crime prevention in North America, Australia, Israel, South Africa and Europe. She is currently an advisor to HEUNI, a UN affiliated crime prevention organisation based in Helsinki.

In 1999 she was awarded an International Fellowship by the United States National Institute of Justice in Washington DC, followed by a four month consultancy at the Australian Institute of Criminology in Canberra. She returned to the UK to take up the post as the founding Director of the Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science in 2001. The institute seeks to engage a wide range of sciences in cross-discipline work with crime reduction as its aim.

Professor Laycock’s contributions cover a wide range of policing and crime prevention topics. A major contribution was to the development of a research programme on repeat crime victimisation. This was both theoretically important and very useful as a practical way in which police could concentrate their crime prevention efforts. The prevention of repeat victimisation became an important indicator of policing performance and effectiveness in the United Kingdom, and is the best example of the way in which she has encouraged the development of evidence-led policing.

She was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2008 Birthday Honours.[1]

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