Description
Governed primarily under the Police and Criminal Evidence (Northern Ireland) Order 1989 (PACE), the Police Service of Northern Ireland’s (PSNI) use of stop and search powers have remained as a consistent - and growing - power over the past decade. Analysis of most recent data shows the powers are used 68% more than ten years ago; and at a greater rate than any other police service in the United Kingdom at 18 per 1000 of population, compared to 9 per 1000 in Scotland, and 7 per 1000 in England & Wales. In this regard, stop and search is the most common form of adversarial contact with the public. PSNI state the powers are ‘an operational tool used to prevent, detect and investigate crime as well as to bring offenders to justice’. Yet empirical evidence demonstrates stop and search has a minimal – and in some cases negligible – effect on the prevention or detection of crime. This can be read in conjunction with policy shifts which have resulted in a 70% drop in use of the powers over the past five years in England/Wales – which encompasses a 16% arrest rate. For PSNI, the average arrest rate sits at 6%, with 8 out of their 11 districts below that level. It is also notable that children (17 and under) remain a significant focus of the powers. Between 2010/11 – 2016/17, over 28,000 children have been subject to stop and search, with 15-17-year-old males five times more likely to be stopped proportional to numbers in the population. Lack of public data also means PSNI’s use of stop and search, in terms of compliance with section 75 of the Northern Ireland Act 1998, the Human Rights Act 1998 or their own Code of Ethics remains difficult to ascertain. Focused primarily on PACE-type powers, this presentation explores the key issues surrounding PSNI’s use of stop and search, raising questions related to use and oversight for all the policing institutions in the country.Period | 09 May 2018 |
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Event title | Knowledge Exchange Seminar Series: Justice - Matters of Civil and Criminal Interest |
Event type | Seminar |
Location | Belfast, United KingdomShow on map |
Degree of Recognition | National |
Keywords
- Police Service of Northern Ireland
- police powers
- police practice
- stop and search
- children's rights
- police stop and search
Documents & Links
- KESS Policy Briefing TOPPING
File: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document, 492 KB
Type: Text
Related content
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Press/Media
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Research output
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Police Stop and Search Powers: Understanding the Adversarial Nature of Contact Between PSNI and the Public
Research output: Book/Report › Other report
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The ‘usual suspects’? Young people’s experiences of police stop and search powers in Northern Ireland
Research output: Book/Report › Other report
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Now you see it, now you don’t: On the (in)visibility of police stop and search in Northern Ireland
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Continuing a-PACE: Summary Report to the Northern Ireland Policing Board Performance Committee October 2020
Research output: Book/Report › Commissioned report
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CONTINUING A-PACE: Phase One Report & Recommendations For PSNI Police College
Research output: Book/Report › Commissioned report
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BAME PSNI Stop and Search Profile - 1st April - 30th June 2020
Research output: Book/Report › Other report
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Misuse of Stop and Search Powers in Northern Ireland?
Research output: Non-textual form › Digital or Visual Products
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The Use of 'Everyday' Stop and Search Powers
Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Featured article
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CONTINUING A-PACE: Phase Two Report For PSNI Police College
Research output: Book/Report › Commissioned report
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Activities
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Police Service of Northern Ireland (External organisation)
Activity: Membership types › Membership of public/government advisory/policy group or panel
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Continuing a-PACE
Activity: Consultancy types › Joint or sponsored appointments or secondments with industry or commerce
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ESRC Festival of Social Science 2017
Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in Festival/Exhibition
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What’s Wrong with Children?! Stop and Search as a Barometer of Young People’s Treatment in a Post-conflict Landscape
Activity: Talk or presentation types › Oral presentation
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Police Stop and Search: A Conversation on Delivery, Experiences and Accountability in Northern Ireland
Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in conference
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Stop & Search: Setting the Context in Northern Ireland
Activity: Talk or presentation types › Public lecture/debate/seminar
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From the Black Death to Belfast: Police Stop and Search as Classificatory Action
Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk
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Children, Stop & Search, and the PSNI
Activity: Talk or presentation types › Oral presentation