Displaying results 1 to 10 out of 36
This event launches the Crime and Justice Administrative Data Network (CJADN). The CJADN is a cross-institutional, cross-regional network open to anyone who uses, wants to use, or wants to learn from crime-related administrative data. The event aims to bring together academics, third-sector organisations, practitioners, and data owners to share knowledge and research using crime-related administrative data.
View event
Join the ADR England Community Catalyst: Children at Risk of Poor Outcomes team for their next webinar, focusing on evaluation using administrative data.
Join this seminar to explore the hidden realities of the ‘patchwork economy’, where multiple jobholding and underemployment are often overlooked or misrepresented in official data.
Join this online event to explore female offending trends in England and Australia through administrative data insights.
Join the ADR England Community Catalyst: Children at Risk of Poor Outcomes group for their next webinar, focusing on evaluation using administrative data.
Join the Education and Child Health Insights from Linked Data (ECHILD) team for a free, in person event at Friends House, London, for an engaging and collaborative day with other ECHILD users. This event provides a unique opportunity to connect with researchers, share experiences, and explore ways to maximise the impact of ECHILD data.
Join the ADR England Community Catalyst: Children at Risk of Poor Outcomes group for two presentations highlighting how connected data can be used to explore and answer current questions in children’s health, social care, and education.
As part of the ADR England Research Community Catalyst: Youth Transitions project, the University of Westminster is running a face-to-face clinic to support researchers in their evaluation challenges using ADR administrative datasets, such as Longitudinal Education Outcomes (LEO) and Grading and Admissions Data for England (GRADE).
This webinar marks the conclusion of an ADR UK Research Fellowship examining the longitudinal relationship between school absences and crime. The project draws on linked administrative data from the Department for Education (DfE) and the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) to explore how patterns of disengagement from school relate to later involvement in the criminal justice system.