Michelle Sydes’s research while affiliated with Griffith University and other places

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Publications (4)


Partnerships in Policing: How Third Parties Help Police to Reduce Crime and Disorder
  • Book

January 2025

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31 Reads

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Kevin Petersen

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Michelle Sydes

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Partnerships in policing are used worldwide to reduce crime and disorder problems. Police forge partnerships with businesses, government agencies, and communities to co-produce public safety. Third-party policing (TPP) is a particular type of partnership that involves the police addressing crime and disorder by working through (and with) third-party partners. This Element focuses on the nature and effectiveness of TPP partnerships. Using systematic review and meta-analytic techniques, it shows that TPP interventions are effective in efforts to reduce crime and disorder, without displacement of these problems. Cooperative partnerships are associated with considerably larger crime control effects than interventions relying on coercive engagement styles. Dyad partnerships – twosome partnerships between police and one third-party partner – are likely to offer the “sweet spot” in TPP. The Element concludes that partnership policing using non-criminal justice legal levers is a promising approach to crime control. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.


Criminal justice interventions for preventing radicalisation, violent extremism and terrorism: An evidence and gap map
  • Article
  • Full-text available

November 2023

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28 Reads

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1 Citation

Michelle Sydes

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Angela Higginson

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[...]

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Download

PRISMA flow diagram.
The evidence and gap map interface for Criminal justice interventions for preventing terrorism and radicalisation.
Included studies by research design.
Studies by country location.
Criminal justice interventions for preventing radicalisation, violent extremism and terrorism: An evidence and gap map

November 2023

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150 Reads

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6 Citations

Background Criminal justice agencies are well positioned to help prevent the radicalisation of individuals and groups, stop those radicalised from engaging in violence, and reduce the likelihood of terrorist attacks. This Evidence and Gap Map (EGM) presents the existing evidence and gaps in the evaluation research. Objectives To identify the existing evidence that considers the effectiveness of criminal justice interventions in preventing radicalisation, violent extremism and terrorism. Search Methods We conducted a comprehensive search of the academic and grey literature to locate relevant studies for the EGM. Our search locations included the Global Policing Database (GPD), eight electronic platforms encompassing over 20 academic databases, five trial registries and over 30 government and non‐government websites. The systematic search was carried out between 8 June 2022 and 1 August 2022. Selection Criteria We captured criminal justice interventions published between January 2002 and December 2021 that aimed to prevent radicalisation, violent extremism, and/or terrorism. Criminal justice agencies were broadly defined to include police, courts, and corrections (both custodial and community). Eligible populations included criminal justice practitioners, places, communities or family members, victims, or individuals/groups who are radicalised or at risk of becoming radicalised. Our map includes systematic reviews, randomised controlled trials, and strong quasi‐experimental studies. We placed no limits on study outcomes, language, or geographic location. Data Collection and Analysis Our screening approach differed slightly for the different sources, but all documents were assessed in the systematic review software program DistillerSR on the same final eligibility criteria. Once included, we extracted information from studies using a standardised form that allowed us to collect key data for our EGM. Eligible systematic reviews were assessed for risk of bias using the AMSTAR 2 critical appraisal tool. Main Results The systematic search identified 63,763 unique records. After screening, there were 70 studies eligible for the EGM (from 71 documents), of which two were systematic reviews (assessed as moderate quality), 16 were randomised controlled trials, and 52 were strong quasi‐experimental studies. The majority of studies (n = 58) reported on policing interventions. Limited evidence was found related to courts or corrections interventions. The impact of these interventions was measured by a wide variety of outcomes (n = 50). These measures were thematically grouped under nine broad categories including (1) terrorism, (2) extremism or radicalisation, (3) non‐terror related crime and recidivism, (4) citizen perceptions/intentions toward the criminal justice system and government, (5) psychosocial, (6) criminal justice practitioner behaviours/attitudes/beliefs, (7) racially targeted criminal justice practices, (8) investigation efficacy, and (9) organisational factors. The most commonly assessed outcomes included measures of terrorism, investigation efficacy, and organisational factors. Very limited research assessed intervention effectiveness against measures of extremism and/or radicalisation. Authors’ Conclusions Conducting high‐quality evaluation research on rare and hidden problems presents a challenge for criminal justice research. The map reveals a number of significant gaps in studies evaluating criminal justice responses to terrorism and radicalisation. We conclude that future research should focus attention on studies that consolidate sound measurement of terrorism‐related outcomes to better capture the potential benefits and harms of counter‐terrorism programs, policies and practices which involve criminal justice agencies.


PROTOCOL: Criminal justice interventions for preventing terrorism and radicalisation: An evidence and gap map

September 2022

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85 Reads

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2 Citations

This is the protocol for a Campbell systematic review. The objectives are as follows: to identify the existing evidence that considers the effectiveness of criminal justice interventions in preventing terrorism and radicalisation and to identify existing gaps in the evidence where new primary research could be undertaken and where future synthesis could be conducted.

Citations (3)


... The search for the EGM (Sydes et al., 2023) was extensive: nearly 70,000 unique records, which, after screening were reduced to 67 studies eligible for the EGM (from 58 documents). These included 2 systematic reviews, 14 randomised controlled trials and 51 quasiexperimental studies. ...

Reference:

Update on Campbell's Countering Violent Extremism programme
Criminal justice interventions for preventing radicalisation, violent extremism and terrorism: An evidence and gap map

... Such interventions are likely not included in the EGM because they have not (yet) been subject to research and/or such research is not publicly available. Therefore, as other EGMs have noted, the gaps are in the research evidence rather than the lack of interventions (Sydes et al. 2023). Several factors may explain this. ...

Criminal justice interventions for preventing radicalisation, violent extremism and terrorism: An evidence and gap map

... justice CVE interventions on the basis that at least one criminal justice agency, such as the police, courts, or corrections is involved (e.g., Sydes et al., 2022). Whilst this definition is useful, criminal justice agencies are often important partners in interventions that work with young people before they have committed any crime (e.g., Thompson & Leroux, 2022), as well as those offered as alternatives to formal processing through the criminal justice system (e.g., Wilson et al., 2018). ...

PROTOCOL: Criminal justice interventions for preventing terrorism and radicalisation: An evidence and gap map