Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- ONE Youth Crime Prevention: Myths and Reality
- TWO Sport Participation and Primary Crime Prevention
- THREE Sports and Secondary Crime Prevention: Youth at Risk
- FOUR Sports and Tertiary Crime Prevention: Desistance from Crime
- FIVE Theory of Change Underlying Sport-Based Programmes
- SIX Emerging Good Practices
- SEVEN Role of Coaches, Mentors, and Facilitators
- EIGHT Crime Prevention Outcomes and Implications for Future Investments
- Notes
- References
- Index
EIGHT - Crime Prevention Outcomes and Implications for Future Investments
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 June 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- ONE Youth Crime Prevention: Myths and Reality
- TWO Sport Participation and Primary Crime Prevention
- THREE Sports and Secondary Crime Prevention: Youth at Risk
- FOUR Sports and Tertiary Crime Prevention: Desistance from Crime
- FIVE Theory of Change Underlying Sport-Based Programmes
- SIX Emerging Good Practices
- SEVEN Role of Coaches, Mentors, and Facilitators
- EIGHT Crime Prevention Outcomes and Implications for Future Investments
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
This chapter concludes the book with a discussion of the place of sports in overall crime prevention strategies and whether further investments in sport-based crime prevention programmes are justified. The coincidence of popular interest in sport-based crime prevention programmes and the limited empirical evidence on their impacts underscores the need for further research. At this point, although there is useful knowledge about what can increase the positive development aspects of a sport-based programme, it remains very difficult to know for whom sport-based crime prevention interventions are most effective and what they should consist of. Definitive conclusions are still not possible about what, if anything, can make sport-based interventions more effective in preventing crime or violence (Spruit et al, 2018a). That drawback points to the critical need for substantial and rigorous evaluations.
There is still a need to isolate and understand both the protective and the negative influences of sports on youth crime and to plan interventions so that negative influences can be confined or mitigated (Spruit et al, 2016). It stands to reason that ‘[t] he most successful sport-related programmes and projects are those which understand what is possible and clearly articulate and implement what they are trying to achieve. Resources should not be allocated to projects which make unqualified claims relating to their capacity to impact upon specific social outcomes. (Crabbe et al, 2006: 4)
Sport-based crime prevention programmes are rarely evaluated and, when they are, the evaluations are methodologically weak and overly simplistic in their theorizing about the causes of youth crime (Bailey, 2005). Based on the present review, it appears that none of the sport-based crime prevention programmes in British Columbia have been evaluated or empirically reviewed and none have formulated a clear theory of change or logic model that directly links activities to crime prevention. It was not even clear that any of these programmes were committed to achieving specific or measurable crime prevention outcomes, and programme leaders did not appear particularly interested in participating in an evaluation of their programme. This is not unique to British Columbia. Yet, one should still ask whether the available evidence of their crime prevention effectiveness justifies investments of crime prevention funds, and whether investments in other programmes may not yield far more important results.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Youth Crime Prevention and SportsAn Evaluation of Sport-Based Programmes and their Effectiveness, pp. 126 - 130Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2022