Criminal Justice Joint Inspection

Criminal Justice Joint Inspection (CJJI)  is a product of long-standing cooperation between the four criminal justice inspectorates (of Constabulary; the Crown Prosecution Service; Prisons; and Probation) which was formalised by the Police and Justice Act 2006.

The purpose of Criminal Justice Joint Inspection

They work together to address issues that involve more than one criminal justice agency and have a direct impact on the public who use the justice system. Working together produces a more rounded examination of issues that cut across the system and enables us to achieve more than if just one inspectorate acted alone.

They support democratic accountability, local transparency and the drive to reduce bureaucracy.

Joint inspection particularly provides a unique focus on:

  • Systemic issues within the criminal justice system (CJS) as a whole
  • Identifying and driving cost from the system
  • Addressing risks and public safety
  • Looking at the system end-to-end and the role individual agencies play
  • Universal issues, standards and constraints within the CJS
  • Public reassurance and confidence

Inspection focus and scope

Their four inspectorates increasingly collaborate to focus on end-to-end and cross-cutting justice processes. To reflect this, they have focussed activity around four high level business processes:

Community safety;

Bringing offenders to justice;

Offender management;

and Custodial conditions

and three cross-cutting issues:

Victim and Witness experience;

Equality and diversity;

and Achieving Value for money and Efficiency.

Latterly, their increased focus on outcomes and the user experience have been key drivers. The overall balance of their joint programme also relies heavily on stakeholder consultation and resultant prioritisation.

Rotten Food Industry

Local farming is fading as profit margins decide what food makes it to our plates. The new Netflix documentary series Rotten exposes the fraud, corruption, corporate crimes and the consequences on our health of today’s global food industry. Nobody’s hands are clean.

Keep your children Safe

With the threat of offenders using online live streaming platforms increasing there is a need to educate children about the associated risks. NCA-CEOP want to help parents and carers protect their children from online offenders like Sam, the fictional narrator of the animation, who targets children online and quickly builds trust with them.

The animation highlights the importance of parents and carers talking openly to their children about being safe online, about healthy relationships and encouraging them to speak out if anything happens online that worries them or doesn’t feel right.

NCA CEOP’s Thinkuknow programme provides information for children, young people, parents and carers about staying safe from sexual abuse and exploitation online. Parents and carers can visit http://www.Thinkuknow.co.uk/parents for advice on keeping their children safe.

More useful videos here.