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Category Archives: Stats

Office Of National Statistics Creates New Centres For Crime and Justice, Equality

04 Thursday Oct 2018

Posted by Natasha in Researching Reform, Stats

≈ Leave a comment

The ONS has just announced that it will be opening five new centres each dedicated to a key policy area, with one of their centres to focus on data relating to crime and justice, and another looking at social mobility and equality issues.

The Office is the UK’s largest independent producer of official statistics and is recognised as the national statistical institute for the UK.

Announcing the new centres on their blog this afternoon, the ONS says it will be focusing on “filling evidence gaps and producing incisive analysis that illuminates the key policy challenges of the age.” The Office hopes the move will help to better inform the public and policy makers.

This development is interesting. Not only is the ONS looking to increase its output on issues that are current, it’s also hoping to pioneer data collection and analysis. The Office are going to do this using new sources of data, adopting the latest tools and approaches, and collaborating with other organisations and individuals. Their Twitter feed has also begun to feature product demos in the form of interactive data charts and maps.

The five new centres are:

  • Centre for Ageing and Demography – assessing the needs of an ageing population
  • Centre for Equalities and Inclusion – addressing questions about fairness and equality in society
  • Centre for Crime and Justice – improving the understanding of the nature of crime
  • Centre for Subnational Analysis – to help local areas design their own policies
  • Centre for International Migration – understanding migration’s significance in our population and economy

Perhaps the two centres of most interest to child welfare organisations will be the Centre for Inequalities and Inclusion and the Centre for Crime and Justice, with upcoming projects to include gathering data on sexual offences from across the criminal justice system to offer deeper insights into this area.

The ONS blog explains in more detail, what these two centres will provide:

“The Centre for Equalities and Inclusion will span a wide range of cross-cutting topic areas including gender and ethnic pay gaps, inter-generational fairness, social and financial exclusion, social mobility, economic inequalities, and inclusive growth. The Centre has also contributed to new EU Guidelines on Inequalities Data Collection and Analysis, to be published later this year.

The Centre for Crime and Justice will be publishing the Domestic Abuse Compendium later this year. Although this publication is not new (see last year’s here) it shows the partnership work the centre will be engaging in; working with a range of internal and external experts and drawing on both our own and others’ data to produce the best insights on some of the most pressing topics. Following this publication, the Centre will be looking to take a similar approach to sexual offences drawing together data from across the crime and criminal justice system to provide new insights in this area.”

ONS Stats

 

 

 

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Family Court & Legal Aid Stats

17 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by Natasha in Researching Reform, Stats

≈ 21 Comments

The latest data on the Family Court and Legal Aid are now in.

The key findings for the Family Court are:

  • Nearly half of new cases are divorce cases
  • The 28 week time period for dealing with care and supervision applications is now the average for such cases
  • There is an upward trend in applications for non molestation domestic violence remedy orders
  • The court is seeing applications for Female Genital Mutilation Protection Orders
  • Adoption orders are decreasing
  • There is an upward trend in applications and orders made under the Mental Capacity Act 2005
  • There has been a sharp rise in the number of deprivation of liberty cases

You can catch the full report here. 

The key findings for legal aid:

  • LASPO continues to affect how legal aid is accessed in civil matters – fluctuations in help workload and shifting patterns suggest parties are finding other ways to access justice or resolution, or simply going without help and guidance
  • Most parties engaging in mediation did so for children related matters (64%)
  • There has been an upward trend in applications for legal aid involving child abuse and domestic violence 

Read the full report here.

LA

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Latest Legal Aid Stats

03 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by Natasha in Stats

≈ 2 Comments

The latest legal aid stats are in, and not surprisingly the worst hit sector is private family law. These figures are for April-June 2014.

The stats make no bones about the fact that the sharp drop in legal aid for family cases is due to the implementation of LASPO, though public family law workloads remain stable (this is due to the fact that public cases are non means and merits tested and applications brought by the Local Authority).

Notable stats include a 27% drop in family law volumes from April to June and a sharp decrease in certificates granted, with just over 30,000 granted in 2013 to just under 20,000 in 2014.

Chart-page0001

 

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New Stats on Privacy Injunctions Published Today

13 Thursday Mar 2014

Posted by Natasha in Family Law, Stats

≈ 4 Comments

The latest statistics are now available on the number of hearings relating to injunctions in civil proceedings. The data focus on applications made in the High Court and Court of Appeal in London from July 2013 – December 2013. This is the fifth statistics  bulletin on privacy injunctions of this nature.

Such applications typically consider injunctions requested to prohibit the publication of private or confidential information. They also include applications requesting the continuation of an injunction, appeals against granted injunctions and those injunctions which are refused. The report focuses on super injunctions, but includes other types as well.

Bearing in mind that the data is only for five months or so, these are the main findings as listed on the Government’s website:

  • There was one proceeding in which the High Court in London considered an application for a new interim injunction prohibiting the publication of private or confidential information.
  • There was one proceeding in which the High Court considered whether to continue or amend an interim injunction.
  • There were no proceedings in which the High Court considered whether to issue a final permanent injunction.
  • Also no proceedings in the Court of Appeal were heard for an appeal against a grant or refusal of an interim or final injunction.

Data for injunctions of this nature are fairly new. In April 2010, The Master of the Rolls chaired a new committee which was set up specifically to look at the legal and procedural aspects of privacy injunctions. This committee raised serious concerns in their report about the growing phenomenon and as a result, the committee decided it would be important to start collecting statistics in this area. Prior to their report published in 2011, no such information was ever collected.

It is a disappointing bulletin in so much as there is very little detail about what types of cases these injunctions involve. As family law ‘injunctions’ are not always technically viewed as injunctions it is also hard to tell whether orders prohibiting the publication of details in family law cases have been included.

There is most definitely room for improvement in these bulletins. Let’s see you rock it, boys.

BB

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