quinta-feira, 10 de dezembro de 2009

International Centre for the Prevention of Crime – Montreal Conference



A conferência internacional do ICPC- International Centre of Crime Prevention, realizado na semana 7-9 de dezembro em Montreal teve como tema "A Prevenção do crime através do mundo: reunindo dados, avaliações e perspectivas futuras". A conferencia comemorativa dos 15 anos do centro teve como ótima noticia para nós, o pedido de filiação do Brasil como país membro do centro ecaminhado pelo secretário da Justiça Romeu Tuma Jr. O secretário apresentou em uma sessão temática o novo paradigma brasileiro de prevenção ao crime, o programa PRONASCI, e os avanços sendo alcançados no pais pelas políticas de segurança publica.
Mesas redondas e workshops temáticos abordaram experiências de prevenção de crime em vários países, as estratégias engajando novos atores, os instrumentos de prevenção, assim como avaliações de sucessos e fracassos. Foram muitas as apresentaçoes de países latino americanos assim como de grupos de defesa de mulheres e populaçoes de maior risco.
A plenária final do evento ressaltou aspectos interessantes para quem como nós do LATTICE, ainda engatinha no processo de conhecer padrões locais do crime e na proposição de estratégias para cidades mais seguras.
Há um sentimento generalizado de que muitos conhecimentos teóricos estão disponíveis, mas poucas são as experiencias que utilizam este rico acervo. Foi muito destacado a necessidade de mais estudos e avaliações, assim como o papel importante que os Observatórios de Crime de vários países têm desempenhado ao levantar e disponibilizar dados sobre criminalidade. Mesmo assim, ressalta-se a necessidade de melhores sistemas de avaliação e da criação de indicadores sensíveis para diagnosticar situações de violência, a sustentabilidade de políticas e de mecanismos de prevenção. Outro aspecto muito discutido foi a importância da esfera local na prevenção do crime. A prática local é vista como base de soluções que realmente tenham impacto sobre a vida das pessoas e capaz de fomentar políticas de baixo para cima. A bagagem foi acrescida de vários quilos com publicações, livros, manuais, kits de prevenção de instituições de todo mundo. Na foto, a minha direita, o secretário de Justiça da Bahia e deputado Nelson Pelegrino e integrantes da delegação brasileira. Desconsiderando o frio e a nevasca que assolou Montreal nesta semana, a cidade é muito bonita e acolhedora.

Premiação de trabalho Arquitetura contra o Crime de Carolina Puttini

Parabéns à nossa pesquisadora Carolina Puttini que acaba de receber o terceiro lugar no concurso de monografias da Primeira Conferencia Nacional de Segurança Publica - CONSEG.
O premio Nacional de monografias em Segurança visa estimular a produção bibliografica qualificada na área de segurança publica com cidadania, bem como dar visibilidade ãs pesquisas empreendidas por estudantes, trabalhadores, servidores publicos que se dedicam ao tema. A monografia Espaço contra o Crime, foi premiada no eixo temático 5 - Prevenção Social do Crime e construção da cultura da paz.
Maiores informações no site: http://www.conseg.gov.br/

quinta-feira, 10 de setembro de 2009

Felicidades às nossas pesquisadoras no exterior

Rafaella no Porto, Portugal
e Carolina Mapu na Espanha

Ok meninas, desejamos grandes experiencias europeias!! Aproveitem o estágio e principalmente, visitem muitos lugares e conversem com muitas pessoas. Estamos esperando voces voltarem ao LATTICE com uma grande bagagem profissional e cultural.
Mandem noticias e informações de tudo que for interessante para nos inspirar e promover uma cidade mais agradável e segura para seus habitantes.

domingo, 31 de maio de 2009

Ruas seguras e a saude das crianças - Safer streets and children's health

Os pesquisadores do Lattice, na busca por soluções para cidades mais seguras, tem sido desenvolvido estudos sobre aspectos espaciais, socias e culturais que impactam a vida nas ruas de nossa cidade. A pesquisa sobre perfis espaciais de ruas tem identificado aspectos morfológicos e tipológicos de bairros que explicam padrões de maior vulnerabilidade ou de segurança, visando a proposta de diretrizes de desenho urbano para aumentar a vigilancia social, incentivar o uso das calçadas, promover movimento e vida social em espaços publicos.

No entanto, para termos cidades mais seguras, devemos reconhecer a importancia de promover o acesso de crianças, principalmente moradoras em locais periféricos e carentes, á espaços publicos de qualidade, com espaços verdes, esquipamentos de lazer e esporte e presença de manifestações onde possam experimentar uma vida publica significativa, necessaria para o desenvolvimento de seres humanos sadios.

O relatório da Academia Americana de Pediatras apresenta pela primeira vez um manifesto forte, baseado em inumeros estudos e pedindo ações para transformação do espaço urbano. Veja abaixo o teor das recomendações:



American Academy of Pediatrics issues policy statement on the role ofthe built environment in children's health


In the June 2009 issue of the journal Pediatrics, the Committee onEnvironmental Health of the American Academy of Pediatrics published apolicy statement on the built environment and children's health. Theeight-page statement presents a critique of existing environmentalconditions for children, with an emphasis on the United States, andrecommends design principles that encourage active living.
The critique covers the inequitable distribution of parks andrecreational facilities in residential neighborhoods, car dependency,dangerous traffic, air pollution, sprawl, "big box" schools on theperiphery of towns and cities, a lack of sidewalks and streetconnectivity in many residential developments, and "food deserts" wherefresh healthy foods are unavailable. Recommendations includeneighborhood schools that encourage walking and biking, safe streets,sidewalks, increased density, mixed use developments, increasedinvestments in parks and recreational facilities, community gardens,attractive streetscapes, urban design that fosters "eyes on the street,"and programs like Safe Routes to School and walking school buses.
The statement concludes by urging pediatricians to become involved inlocal planning processes, identify barriers to physical activity in theenvironments of their patients and their families, and encourage parentsto advocate for better environments on children's behalf. It alsosuggests ways that governments can target legislation, funding, andregulations to promote the development of healthy communities forchildren. For everyone working for this goal, the statement signals thatinfluential new allies have emerged among the American Academy ofPediatrics and its members.
Committee on Environmental Health. (2009). The built environment:Designing communities to promote physical activity in children.Pediatrics, 123(6), 1591-1598.

segunda-feira, 4 de maio de 2009



By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO
Published: May 3, 2009

Times Topics

After being robbed twice in traffic, once at gunpoint, João Neves cast aside whatever concerns he had about the global economic crisis and bought himself an armored car two months ago.
“Even though the crisis does exist, I consider my well-being and my security a priority,” said Mr. Neves, the owner of a small marketing agency. “I am afraid of being shot dead.”
Rather than buy a new car, though, Mr. Neves opted for a 2005 Volkswagen Passat capable of withstanding bullets fired from a .44 Magnum revolver or a 9-millimeter submachine gun.
Brazilians have already trimmed their appetites for appliances and electronics in the recession, but bulletproofing is one expense they are not giving up easily. Once the domain of the very rich, armored cars have become a middle- and upper-middle-class obsession, especially in this huge city notorious for roadside assaults and kidnappings.
Officially, crime is on the wane. But as the economy slides and the country sheds jobs, there is a palpable dread that street crime will get worse as well, economists here say. Many Paulistanos, as São Paulo residents are called, say the interminable stop-and-go traffic and the wide gap between haves and have-nots are recipes for assaults and carjackings, especially now that Brazil’s boom times have come to a halt.
“It is not a question of if you are going to be assaulted, it is when it is going to happen,” said Craig Bavington, who runs a tourist agency based here. After being assaulted twice, he decided to buy a used armored car two years ago when his wife became pregnant with their first child.
More than 7,000 vehicles were armored for civilian use in Brazil in 2008, up from 1,782 a decade earlier, and the pace has continued in 2009 despite the economy’s dispiriting first quarter, according to the Brazilian Association of Bulletproof Manufacturers.
A decade ago, there were just a handful of armoring companies in Brazil. Today there are about 120.
São Paulo leads the country — and the world — in making and selling armored cars. Rio de Janeiro, a city with legitimate concerns about stray bullets from gang warfare in the favelas, or shantytowns, overhanging the city, is Brazil’s second-largest market.
The government, perhaps unwittingly, has helped perpetuate the bulletproofing wave. With industrial production slowing last year, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s administration removed a tax on the car industry, saving buyers from 5 to 7.5 percent.
The change was so popular that the government recently took similar action for electronics and appliances, hoping to stop the bleeding in those industries as well.
So while car sales have suffered in other parts of the world, they have surged here in the past four months, the longest streak of monthly sales increases since 2002, according to the National Association of Car Manufacturers. And when car sales are strong, industry officials say, bulletproofing invariably follows. With so many companies now in the field, the cost of armoring a car has fallen in Brazil in the past decade, to about $22,000 from $55,000, opening the business to a new category of consumer.
A decade ago, BMWs, Mercedes-Benzes and Jeep Cherokees were the models most sought after for armoring; today, Toyota, Volkswagen and Chevrolet are in the top five. Ultimately, however, crime is the force behind it all. Economic contagion in the late 1990s spread from Asia to Brazil, sinking the currency’s value here and leading to record unemployment and high poverty.
In 1999, the city of São Paulo recorded a murder rate of nearly 53 per 100,000 people, according to the state’s Department of Public Safety — much worse than New York City has ever recorded. In the late 1990s, the United Nations ranked Jardim Ângela, in São Paulo, as the most violent neighborhood in the world.
Since then, the murder rate in São Paulo has fallen by 78 percent and vehicle thefts by 38 percent, though armed robberies have dropped by only 6 percent. More police officers are on the streets, especially on big, congested avenues, said Tulio Kahn, the São Paulo state coordinator of planning and analysis. Global positioning systems and coded locking devices have helped many owners track and retrieve their stolen cars.
And yet, Mr. Kahn said the drop in the crime statistics “has not kept people from continuing to feel insecure.”
A new wave of “flash” or “express” kidnappings, unplanned assaults in which robbers take their captives to cash machines and then free them after a few hours, has not helped matters. “This type of crime has really scared people,” Mr. Kahn said.
A commodity-led boom in Brazil in the past several years gave many Paulistanos the money to fight back. More stable inflation set off an unprecedented expansion in consumer credit. Car sales surged to record levels, topping 2.8 million in 2008, up from 1.9 million in 2006; according to government statistics, there are about 6.4 million cars on the roads in São Paulo, a city with a population of 11 million.
The ability to buy cars in installments also helped make armored cars more affordable to middle- and upper-middle-class professionals like Mr. Neves. Today, dentists, children of small businessmen, even shoe store owners are buying armored cars, many of them used, said João Jorge Chamlian, owner of Auto Miami, a dealership here for armored cars.
On the city’s outskirts, at the hangar-size assembly plant for Truffi, one of Brazil’s largest armoring companies, some 100 workers installed yellow Kevlar and thick glass windows one recent morning. The bulletproof armor adds about 400 pounds to a car’s weight, which reduces gas mileage and increases wear and tear.
For Mr. Neves, who spends more than two and a half hours a day commuting, the more protection the better. He was shaken, he said, when a client of his was shot dead by a robber who took only the man’s watch. “When you are inside an armored car,” Mr. Neves said, “you feel as if you are inside a fortress.”
For Alessandra Amara, a bulletproof car became a necessary expense three years ago, she said, after she was robbed for the 11th time in little more than 10 years. “Having an armored car in this city is essential,” said Ms. Amara, 34, who works in the financial department of a car dealership. “I have been robbed every way imaginable.”
Once, thieves abducted her in her car at gunpoint and made her pull money from two bank machines before freeing her. Another night, as she waited in her car at a red light, a gunman stole her wallet as witnesses silently stood by.
The last straw came when she was leaving work in bumper-to-bumper traffic. Suddenly, a boy slammed a stone through her window and grabbed for her purse. She took her foot off the clutch and crashed into the car ahead of hers. She clung to the purse and the thief ran away.
She arrived home, trembling with fear. Soon after, she became pregnant, and she and her husband decided to buy a used armored car. “If the government can’t keep me safe,” Ms. Amara said, “then I have to go out and look for that security on my own.”

quarta-feira, 29 de abril de 2009


A Ópera de Oslo, do Snøhetta, vence o Mies van der Rohe 2009

A Ópera de Oslo, na Noruega, projeto do escritório Snøhetta, venceu o Prêmio Mies van der Rohe 2009.
Francis Rambert, presidente da Comissão Julgadora, destacou:
“A Ópera de Oslo é mais do que um simples edifício. Antes de tudo, trata-se de um espaço urbano, um presente para a cidade. O edifício pode ser considerado como um catalisador de todas as energias da cidade e é emblemático no processo de regeneração do seu tecido urbano.”
O projeto foi resultado de um concurso internacional realizado em 2000, que atraiu 240 inscritos de todo o mundo (o maior concurso realizado até então na Noruega). O edifício, com área construída de aproximadamente 38.500 m2, custou 750 milhões de dólares.

sábado, 11 de abril de 2009

The socio-economic value of urban layout

The relevance of urban layout for placemaking has been published in strategic policy documents such as Paved with Gold (CABE). Based on such work, a team led by Space Syntax is developing an evidence-based urban layout evaluation programme able to overcome the barriers preventing layout factors being considered in economic appraisals.
Urban layout, and its effects on social, cultural and economic aspects of community, is an intangible asset, difficult to visualise and measure during the planning and design process. Although methods of quantifying and measuring the relational properties of urban layout within its context have been developed by researchers at UCL and other institutions, and used successfully within the new planning process, only a handful of Local Authorities and Regional Development Agencies make use of them.
A series of partnership workshops has identified themes where the impact of urban layout has been scientifically proven, and where tangible spatial design, social and economic indicators for the performance of layout can be found. Five themes were identified for further analysis.
• the value of property security Based on the analysis of burglary patterns over five years in a London borough, Professor Bill Hillier and Oezlem Shabaz at UCL identified four major layout factors that contribute to safer places. One of these factors reducing burglary risk is the existence of a residential culture, which can be measured by the number of dwellings per street segment.
• the value of personal security The same research shows three spatial factors that reduce the risk of street robbery, one of them being the relationship between sufficient movement rates resulting from an integrated spatial layout and residential culture measured by dwellings per street segment.
• the value of urban centres The recently published study Paved with Gold (CABE/Buchanan 2007) that showed the impact of street design on the economic impact in ten London high streets was complemented by a strategic layout component. It shows that successful urban centres have particular spatial features, for example significantly smaller urban blocks and higher accessibility streets that distinguish them from their context. Importantly, this study enables us to distinguish spatial effects and compositional effects.• the value of residential property Analysis carried out by UCL and Savills Research on more than 100,000 dwellings in a London borough showed that the distribution of residential property values, measured by council tax band data, follows a clear spatial pattern. A concentration of higher value properties is found at globally integrated places, where locally integrated places tend to have lower property values. Savills Research showed that tax band trends are in line with property sales.• the value of public realm design Based on the recently completed public realm improvements in the Walworth Road in Southwark, a before and after assessment of the detailed public realm has been carried out comparing the results of the Pedestrian Environment Review System (PERS2) with the spatial layout analysis. The case study also suggests a way to capture the health impact of a more pedestrian-friendly street layout through higher physical activity rates.
The new layout value tool calculates these indicators on the basis of simple Ordnance Survey maps. A set of GIS-based computer tools has been programmed by Space Syntax to calculate the indicators using available spatial and statistical datasets (Ordnance Survey, Office of National Statistics). The tools can quantify and monetise the socio-economic benefits of urban layout.
This project, known as IVALUL, has been supported by the
UrbanBuzz knowledge exchange programme.
For more details, please contact a.chiaradia@spacesyntax.com or c.schwander@spacesyntax.com
http://www.urbanbuzz.org/scommunities/homePage.do

terça-feira, 10 de março de 2009

UCL-SECReT Novo Centro de treinamento em ciencias de Segurança

Atenção o centro anuncia a disponibilidade de 11 bolsas de doutorado

UCL SECReT offers 11 scholarships paying full PhD fees and approx£17,000 per annum as stipend for four years. Applications are now open- deadline 31st May.

BACKGROUND & VISION

UCL SECReT is the new national Security Science Doctoral ResearchTraining centre. The Centre is supported by EPSRC and promotes RCUK'snew 4-year PhD format considered a superior alternative to the usual3-year PhD. UCL SECReT brings together over 20 research groups at UCLand 30 partners from industry, academia and government to offer the most comprehensive, integrated 4-year PhD programme for students wishing to pursue security or crime-related research.

http://www.ucl.ac.uk/secret/homepage/

Crime and terrorism are constantly evolving threats. National infrastructures such as transport, power and communications need to remain protected and identity theft and credit card fraud continue to have a devastating impact on everyday life. UCL SECReT will producethe next generation of security scientists who will be ready for such challenges.

Professor Gloria Laycock OBE
Director, UCL SECReTDirector, UCL Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science
** 11 Scholarships Available. Please forward to others who may benefit. **

sexta-feira, 27 de fevereiro de 2009

Civil society organization provides data on security

INTERVIEW/ Renato Sérgio de Lima

The road to better security in 2009 means finding viable solutions for combating violence. Often, however, valuable information is lacking. Even when existing data is divulged, it is often released without much needed complementary information necessary to support the design of public security strategies.

Created in March 2006, the Brazilian Public Security Forum is a non profit, non governmental organization, with no political afiliation that is becoming a reference in the field, it holds meetings, issues publications and has an interactive website.

Interviewed by Comunidad Segura, the Scientific Coordinator of the Brazilian Public Security Forum (FBSP), Renato Sérgio de Lima, a sociologist, stresses the importance of greater accountability, a debate on the role of municipalities in security, and the need to value the work of police officers and law enforcement institutions. De Lima is hopeful with respect to 2009:

“The challenges are great, but we can say that we can say we there is already accumulated wealth of initiatives, energy and experience, whether this comes from police officers, civil society or governments.”

The yearbook compiles data that is available from a number of sources, but that cannot be easily accessed. When we present data, we offer it in a format that allows for contrasting and comparing information, we also offer data organized chronologicaly in what we call historical series. Our larger goal is to promote transparency, and with it accountability in public security policy and law enforcement.
What are the most important points of the 2008 yearbook?

In the 2008 yearbook we highlight the debate on the the role of municipalities in public security, one of the main topics in Brazil's political agenda. We also updated the series we began in 2007 on public spending and crime statistics.

When will your 2008 meeting be held?

The III FBSP Meeting will be held in Vitória, Espírito Santo State, April 1st to 3rd. We are being supported by the State of Espirito Santo, by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation and the National Public Security Office (Senasp).

What does 2009 bring the FBSP?

Aside from the yearly meetings, we have a number of projects that focus on divulging technical data on the one hand, and on promoting a greater appreciation of the work of police officers on the other. We have a scholarship program, an interactive website, and there are partnerships with the Latin American Network of Police Officers and Civil Society, to name a few.
How does the Forum see the National Program for Public Security with Citizenship (Pronasci)?
The Forum does not take political stances. Since we do not have any tecnical evaluations of the Pronasci, I am unable to comment.

The Forum was created in hopes that we may see that light, in the belief that if we invest in accountability mechanisms, and an appreciation of police institutions, it will make a difference. Of course the challenges facing us are great, but there is already a wealth of accumulated initiatives, energy and experiences, whether it comes from law enforcement, civil society or governments.