
Bradford Inst for Health Research (BIHR)
Bradford Inst for Health Research (BIHR)
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
- assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2027Partners:The Home Office, North Yorkshire Police, DENI, Global Law Enforcement & Pub Health Assc, University of York +87 partnersThe Home Office,North Yorkshire Police,DENI,Global Law Enforcement & Pub Health Assc,University of York,Durham Constabulary,Global Law Enforcement & Pub Health Assc,Ministry of Housing, Communities & L.Gov,College of Policing,Crisis,Hope for Justice UK,DFE,National Police Chief's Council,N8 Research Partnership,Revolving Doors Agency,Youth Justice Board,The Alan Turing Institute,Bradford Inst for Health Research (BIHR),Stanford University,Revolving Doors Agency,Municipal of Lisbon Chamber (Council),City of Bradford Metropolitan Dist Counc,The Alan Turing Institute,West Yorkshire Police,SU,Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,College of Policing,HO,Centre Point,Bradford Inst for Health Research (BIHR),Merseyside Police,Unseen UK,Hope for Justice UK,Stanford University,Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime,Marie Collins Foundation,HMG,Health Education England,Turning Point,Security Industry Authority (SIA),Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner,HM Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC),Bradford Metropolitan District Council,North Yorkshire Police,West Yorkshire and Harrogate Health Care,European Forum for Urban Security,Adfam,Unseen (UK),Leeds City Council,DEPARTMENT FOR EDUCATION,Home Office,Security Industry Authority (SIA),Tasmanian Institute of Law Enforce Stud,Health Education England,City of Bradford Metropolitan Dist Counc,HM Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC),Turning Point,National Police Chief's Council,Safer Leeds,Ministry of Housing, Communities & L.Gov,N8 Research Partnership,Adfam,Leeds City Council,Municipal of Lisbon Chamber (Council),West Yorkshire and Harrogate Health Care,LEEDS CITY COUNCIL,Changing Lives,Durham Constabulary,HO,West Yorkshire Police,MoJ,Centre Point,West Yorkshire Police,Youth Justice Board,West Yorks. Police & Crime Commissioner,West Yorks. Police & Crime Commissioner,Tasmanian Institute of Law Enforce Stud,European Forum for Urban Security,Changing Lives,University of York,Durham Constabulary,Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime,Association of Chief Police Officers,Safer Leeds,Crisis,Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner,Merseyside Police,BRADFORD METROPOLITAN DISTRICT COUNCIL,Department for Education,The Marie Collins Foundation,Leeds City Council,Ministry of Justice (UK)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: ES/W002248/1Funder Contribution: 7,976,110 GBP- Policing is undergoing rapid transformation. As societies face new and more complex challenges, police workloads increasingly focus on managing risks of harm to vulnerable people. At the same time, public debate voicing concerns about police priorities is rising, driven by questions about what the police do and about legitimacy in the face of discriminatory practices. Dramatic increases in complex cases coupled with cuts to public services have resulted in the police frequently acting as 'the service of first resort', at the frontline of responding to urgent social problems such as mental illness, homelessness and exploitation. The presence of such vulnerabilities draw the police into responses alongside other service providers (such as health, social care and housing) often with little clarity of roles, boundaries or shared purpose. Simultaneously, the transformation of data and its use are beginning to reshape how public services operate. They raise new questions about how to work in ethical ways with data to understand and respond to vulnerability. These shifts in police-work are mirrored around the world and pose significant challenges to how policing is undertaken and how the police interact with other public services, as well as how policing affects vulnerable people who come into contact with services. The Vulnerability and Policing Futures Research Centre aims to understand how vulnerabilities shape demand for policing and how partner organisations can prevent future harm and vulnerability through integrated public service partnerships. Rooted in rich local data collection and deep dives into specific problems, the Centre will build a knowledge base with applications and implications across the UK and beyond. It will have significant reach through collaborative work with a range of regional, national and international partners, shaping policy and practice through networks, practitioner exchanges and comparative research, and through training the next generation of scholars to take forward new approaches to vulnerabilities research and co-production with service providers, service receivers and the public. The Centre will be an international focal point for research, policy, practice and public debate. Jointly led by York and Leeds, with expertise from Durham, Lancaster, Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield, UCL, Monash and Temple universities and the Police Foundation, and working with a network of 38 partners, it will explore fundamental questions regarding the role police and their partners should play in modern society. While focusing policing effort on the most vulnerable holds promise for a fairer society, targeting specific groups raises questions about who counts as vulnerable and has the potential to stigmatise and increase intervention in the lives of marginalised citizens. At a critical time of change for policing, the Centre will ensure that research, including evidence drawing on public opinion and the voices of vulnerable people, is at the heart of these debates. The Centre will undertake three interconnected strands of research. The first focuses on how vulnerability develops in urban areas, drawing together diverse public sector datasets (police, health, social services and education) to understand interactions between agencies and the potential to prevent vulnerabilities. The second explores how police and partners can best collaborate in response to specific vulnerabilities, including exploitation by County Lines drug networks, online child sexual exploitation, domestic abuse, modern slavery, mental illness and homelessness. The third will combine research into public opinion with a programme to embed research evidence into policy, practice and public debate, creating a new understanding of vulnerability and transforming capability to prevent harm and future vulnerabilities through integrated partnership working, reshaping the future of policing as a public service. All Research products- arrow_drop_down - <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://beta.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::68fa6209aacb0804ea4bd577a2bdc1db&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eu- more_vert All Research products- arrow_drop_down - <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://beta.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::68fa6209aacb0804ea4bd577a2bdc1db&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eu
- assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2026Partners:Newcastle City Council, The Paul Hogarth Company, Public Health Agency, Health Data Research UK, East Belfast Community Development Agenc +66 partnersNewcastle City Council,The Paul Hogarth Company,Public Health Agency,Health Data Research UK,East Belfast Community Development Agenc,Bradford Inst for Health Research (BIHR),NHS Liverpool CCG,Mae Murray Foundation,Safe Regeneration,Public Health Scotland,Eastside Partnership,City of Edinburgh Council,University of Bristol,Spotteron Gmbh | Citizen Science Platfor,Belfast Healthy Cities,NEWCASTLE CITY COUNCIL,Cyrenians,University of Glasgow,Canal & River Trust,Department for Infrastructure,Aecom (United Kingdom),The Scottish Forestry Trust,Sustrans,Health All Round,Dock Branch Neighbourhood Community Pane,Edinburgh & Lothians Health Foundation,Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,WHALEArts,Warrington Borough Council,LIVERPOOL CITY COUNCIL,Changes Community Health Project,Administrative Data Research Centre - NI,Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust,Belfast Innovation Team,Regenerus,Moai Digital Ltd,Scottish Forestry,SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT,Global Innovation Institute,AECOM Limited (UK),Paths for All,Department for Infrastructure,Glasgow Centre for Population Health,Wirral Council,Liverpool City Council,Cycling UK,Edinburgh Health & Social Care Partnrshp,National Inst. Health & Care Research,Carlisle City Council,The Welcoming Association,Liverpool Health Partners,Greenspace Scotland (United Kingdom),Climate Northern Ireland,The Mersey Forest,EastSide Partnership,University of Liverpool,NatureScot (Scottish Natural Heritage),Ashton Community Trust,Fountainbridge Canalside Community Trust,Translink (United Kingdom),Belfast Hills Partnership,Resilient Belfast,Belfast City Council,Liverpool City Region Combined Authority,Scottish Government,QUB,CITY OF EDINBURGH COUNCIL,Anaeko,Heath and Social Care (HSCNI),National Institute for Health Research,HDRUK Wales and Northern IrelandFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: MR/V049704/1Funder Contribution: 7,116,890 GBP- There is strong evidence that natural environments within urban areas, such as parks, woodlands, lakes and beaches, have positive impacts on health. These urban green and blue spaces (UGBS) could be huge assets for protecting and equalising health if they were available, accessible, valued and well-used, particularly by less advantaged groups. The problem is that they are not. This is largely because the many policies, organisations and communities involved in designing, creating, managing, promoting, maintaining and using UGBS are disconnected. Also, the voices of less advantaged communities that UGBS could be helping most are either not heard or not persuasive. Perhaps as a consequence, those communities are much less likely to benefit from these spaces. We know that the UGBS we have are not the UGBS we need to make the best possible contribution to better and more equal health. GroundsWell aims to change that. We propose a new partnership - researchers working together with communities and those who currently create and control UGBS, to plan, design and manage it better so that it benefits everyone, especially those who need it most. The main research will take place in three cities - Belfast, Edinburgh and Liverpool. These have sufficient similarities (such as large and diverse low-income communities) but also distinct features (such as geography and culture) making them, collectively, an ideal laboratory. Each city already has policies and programmes in place to improve UGBS, but there is much room for improvement. GroundsWell will take a systems approach. This means understanding the multiple and interconnecting components of policy-making, practice, perception and people which together affect the presence, location, character and use of UGBS. It also means working to transform the system so that the components function together. To do this, GroundsWell will mix co-development of new theoretical frameworks, novel data science including simulation, health economics and policy analysis, but at its heart will be community engagement and partnership. We will develop and use meaningful community engagement, co-production and citizen science to understand the system, identify how and where it is broken, and co-create solutions. We anticipate interventions aimed at how the UGBS system operates, and small-scale interventions around actual spaces and their use. Data play an important part in understanding systems. GroundsWell will develop an accessible, trustworthy and policy-relevant system to collate, collect, house and share data on UGBS across the three cities. These data will be used to help the whole Consortium understand the UGBS there, identify possible interventions, and then assess whether they work, for whom and why, creating feedback loops to help us continually monitor, learn and adapt what we do. Novel simulation approaches will also be used to suggest interventions, and in particular what could be effective beyond the three cities. Health economics will suggest what would be best value for money. An important part of putting actions and solutions in place is understanding if they work (or not). Evaluation of our actions and the Consortium as a whole will be undertaken in partnership with our communities, drawing on the new data system we establish, and enabling them to directly see whether and how the process has benefited them. In particular, we will assess and share our impacts on health inequalities. We are realistic about the likely scale of our impacts. Small actions within existing UGBS and local communities are unlikely to affect population level health and inequalities within our funded period. That is why we are going to focus on improving the UGBS system as a whole, laying foundations for long-term benefits. We know that the use and enjoyment of UGBS is something that adults pass on to their children. If GroundsWell can improve and equalise the role of UGBS, it will achieve a lasting impact. All Research products- arrow_drop_down - <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://beta.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::340d7a9108977c52fca2d7e305cf0314&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eu- more_vert All Research products- arrow_drop_down - <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://beta.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::340d7a9108977c52fca2d7e305cf0314&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eu