English | Español

Programme

Tuesday 7th

Schedule
Session
Venue
08:00 - 09:00
Registration
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
09:00 - 09:50
Opening Session
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
10:00 - 10:50
Keynote. The statistical challenges of SDG’s Goal 16
  • Graeme Newman, University at Albany, USA
Chaired by Angela Me, UNODC
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
10:50 - 11:20
Coffee Break
Lobby
11:20 - 13:00
Parallel sessions
Session. The use of Big Data in the Criminal Justice System
  • Considering the Purpose in Assessing Fitness for Use of Administrative Data: Examples from Bureau of Justice Statistics’s Various Measures of Recidivism
    Chris Cutler,
    Abt Associates
  • Estimating arrest-related deaths in the US: Utility of open source data and voluntary agency reporting methodologies
    Duren Banks and Chris Krebs,
    RTI International
  • Using Big Data to Build an Open Source Terrorism Database
    Gary LaFree
    University of Maryland, USA
Chaired by James Lynch, University of Maryland
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Measuring government performance
  • Developing and Implementing Sustainable Performance Indicators in the Public Sector
    Patria De Lancer Julnes, Penn State Harrisburg, USA
  • Public sector achievement in 36 countries: A comparative assessment of inputs, outputs and outcomes
    Benedikt Goderis, Sociaal en Cultureel Planbureau, Netherlands
  • Measuring Integrity: More than the Opposite of Corruption
    Raymond W. Cox III, University of Akron, USA
  • Country-specific diagnostic assessments: an alternative approach for policy reform
    Francesca Recanatini, WB
  • Using outcome mapping to construct system performance measures
    Robert Varenik, Open Society
Chaired by David Arellano, CIDE, Mexico
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
13:00 - 14:15
Lunch
Uxmal 4, Centro de Convenciones XXI
14:15 - 14:55
5th International Thesis Competition on Public Safety, Victimization and Justice in Latin America and the Caribbean

Awards Ceremony
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
15:00 - 16:30
Parallel sessions
Session. Drugs crops: going beyond production and cultivation
  • The Interaction between Statistics and Policy Implementation from International to National
    John Collins
    London School of Economics, United Kingdom
  • Alternative development: The challenge of creating modern citizens
    Francisco Thoumi, International Narcotics Control Board
  • Information needed for planning alternative development.
    Angela Me, UNODC
Chaired by Antonio Mazzitelli, UNODC
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Measuring evidence-based crime prevention policies
  • General Overview on Crime Prevention
    Richard Wortley, UCL
  • Global efforts to measure national violence prevention activities: what’s been done and what’s to come
    Alex Butchart, WHO
  • Importance of evidence and knowledge in the development of policies.
    Diego Fleitas, Ministry of Security, Argentina
Chaired by Manuel Eisner
Cambridge University, United Kingdom
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
16:30 - 18:00
Parallel sessions
Session. Recent developments on victimization surveys
  • The latest sweeps of the ICVS: Beijing, the Caribbean and Kyrgyzstan
    Jan van Dijk
    Tilburg University, Netherlands
  • A new understanding of citizen security in the Caribbean: Victimization surveys
    Heather Sutton,
    Interamerican Development Bank
  • Balancing instruments and methodologies: the Latin America and the Caribbean Crime Victimization Survey Initiative (VICLAC-LACSI),
    Alejandra Gómez Céspedes
    INEGI UNODC Center of Excellence
  • The National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS): Redesigning for Reliability and Relevance
    Michael Planty
    US Bureau of Justice Statistics, USA
Chaired by Marcelo Aebi
University of Laussane, Switzerland
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Exploring metrics on drugs consumption
  • The importance of measuring drug use, not just the number of drug users.
    Jonathan Caulkins
    Carnegie Mellon University, USA
  • Alejandro Hope, Security Specialist
  • Measuring drug use by wastewater analysis
    Ettore Zuccato, Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research, Italy
Chaired by John Collins, London School of Economics, United Kingdom
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
18:00 - 18:30
Official photo
Front stairs, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
18:30 - 20:30
Reception
Main Terrace, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya

Wednesday 8th

Schedule
Session
Venue
09:00 - 10:00
Keynote. Using crime, victimization and justice statistics to understand the global crime drop and its implications for crime prevention policy
  • Nick Tilley, University College London, United Kingdom
Chaired by Adrián Franco Barrios, INEGI, México
Mayamax, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
10:00 - 11:20
Parallel sessions
Session. Use of police administrative records in policy making
  • Statistical Project: Police Conducts and Services. Colombian Delinquency and Operational National System
    Pedro Bernal
    National Police, Colombia
  • Scope and potential analysis of criminal phenomena using police administrative records
    Claudio Suárez
    Consultant, Argentina
  • São Paulo´s crime statistics: challenges ahead
    Stephanie Morin, Instituto Sou da Paz, Brazil
  • Enrique Galindo, Federal Police, Mexico
Chaired by Salome Flores Sierra, INEGI UNODC Center of Excellence
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Using local measurement to drive and monitor local violence prevention efforts
  • Does evidence-based policy reduce levels of violence? What data are needed to find out?
    Manuel Eisner
    Cambridge University, United Kingdom
  • Using data from Emergency Departments to prevent violence
    Jonathan Shepherd
    University of Cardiff, United Kingdom
  • Understanding fear of crime at the local level: Evidence from Chile
    Lucia Dammert
    Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Chile
Chaired by Alex Butchart
World Health Organization
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
11:20 - 11:50
Coffee Break
Mayamax Lobby
11:50 - 13:00
Parallel sessions
Session. How to measure corruption?
  • Measuring corruption by actionable tools
    Alina Mungiu-Pippidi
    Hertie School of Governance, Germany
  • The Ethics of Performance Measurement in Policing: A Comparison of Street Level Assessment in London, New York, and Stockholm
    Frank Anechiarico
    Hamilton College, USA
  • Measuring corruption: Between measuring human feelings and measuring the universe
    Adrián Franco
    INEGI, Mexico
Chaired by Enrico Bisogno, UNODC
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Geography of crime: place and time matter
  • The role of the street network in crime pattern formation
    Shane Johnson
    University College London, United Kingdom
  • Crime and Asset Mapping to Guide Community Interventions
    Elizabeth Ward
    Violence Prevention Alliance Jamaica &
    Parris Lyew-Ayee Jr, University of the West Indies, Jamaica
  • Crime Concentration and Hot Spot Dynamics in Latin America
    Laura Jaitman,
    Inter-American Development Bank
Chaired by Carlos Vilalta, CIDE
Mayamax, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
13:00 - 13:45
Lunch
Uxmal 4, Centro de Convenciones XXI
13:45 - 14:30
Keynote. Wildlife trafficking
  • Angela Me, UNODC
Chaired by Jonathan Caulkins, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
14:30 - 16:00
Parallel sessions
Session. Crimes difficult-to-measure
  • Arms and illegal arms: sources, data and recent analysis
    Matthias Nowak, Small Arms Survey
  • Measuring fraud on the Crime Survey for England and Wales
    Joe Traynor, Office for National Statistics, United Kingdom
  • What violent crime statistics tell us and what they hide: Homicides, forced disappearances, kidnappings
    Edgar Vielma, INEGI, México
  • From crime statistical systems to crime control strategies
    Ricardo Marquez, National Security Commission, Mexico
Chaired by Enrico Bisogno, UNODC
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Measuring Rape and Sexual Assault in Self-report Surveys
  • The Impact of Rape and Sexual Assault Definitions on Rates and Characteristics of Victimization
    Lynn Langton
    Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, USA
  • Data Collection Methods for Improving the Validity of Self-Reported Sexual Assault Data
    Michael Planty
    Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, USA
  • Measuring the Incidence and Prevalence of Sexual Victimization: BJS’s Experience of Implementing the Prison Rape Elimination Act
    Allen J. Beck
    Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, USA
  • Comparing Three Measures of Rape and Sexual Assault
    David Cantor
    Westat, Inc, USA
Chaired by James Lynch
University of Maryland, USA
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
16:00 - 17:30
Parallel sessions
Session. Understanding Crime Trends in the United States of America
  • When Choice of Data Matters: Analyses of U.S. Crime Trends, 1973-2012,
    Janet Lauritsen
    University of Missouri-St. Louis, USA
  • Dissecting the Prevalence and Incidence of Offending During the Crime Drop of the 1990s
    Eric Baumer,
    Penn State, USA
  • Acquisitive Crime and Inflation in the United States: 1960 – 2012,
    Richard Rosenfeld
    University of Missouri-St. Louis, USA
Chaired by Manuel Eisner
Cambridge University, United Kingdom
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. National implementation of the International Crime Classification for Statistical Purposes
  • The application of the ICCS in sexual crimes
    Allen J. Beck
    Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, USA
  • Mapping the ICCS in Germany
    Thomas Baumann
    Federal Statistical Office, Germany
  • Adapting the ICCS into the Mexican National Context
    Edgar Guerrero, INEGI, México
Chaired by Michael Jandl, UNODC
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya

Thursday 9th

Schedule
Session
Venue
09:00 - 10:00
Keynote
  • Renato Sales, National Security Commission, Mexico
Chaired by Julio Santaella, INEGI, México
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
10:00 - 10:20
Coffee Break
Lobby
10:20 - 11:50
Session. Estimating the value of Illicit markets
  • Measuring Illicit Financial Flows,
    Volker Nitsch,
    Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany
  • Estimating Illicit Financial Flows--Trade Misinvoicing
    Matthew Salomon
    Global Financial Integrity
  • Measuring Illicit tobacco markets
    Ernesto Savona, Transcrime
  • Illicit markets and the rise in crime in Latin America: The case of car-thefts
    Marcelo Bergman, National University of Tres de Febrero, Argentina
Chaired by Angela Me, UNODC
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
12:00 - 13:15
Parallel sessions
Session. How to measure Human Trafficking: practical experiences
  • Estimating the dark numbers of human trafficking victims using Multiple Systems Estimation
    Jan van Dijk
    Tilburg University, Netherlands
  • Trafficking in the state of Guanajuato. Location and areas of influence trafficking crime
    Francisco Javier Mancha
    Auditoria Superior del Estado de Guanajuato, Mexico
  • Roberto Campa, SEGOB
Chaired by Felipe De La Torre, UNODC
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Application of crime, victimization and justice statistics in policy making
  • Improving international comparisons of criminal justice statistics through a multi-level approach
    Joerg-Martin Jehle
    University of Göttingen, Germany
  • Comparing National VictimisationSurveys: A Case Study of Five European Countries
    Richard Wortley, UCL, UK
  • The Value of Cross Comparative Crime and Justice Statistics for National Policy Planning
    Tapio Lappi-Seppälä, Institute of Criminology and Legal Policy, Finland
  • Crime, victimization and justice statistics in public policy
    Roman Souberville,
    Judicial Council of the Judiciary of the State of Hidalgo
Chaired by Marcelo Aebi, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
13:15 - 14:30
Lunch
Uxmal 4, Centro de Convenciones XXI
14:30 - 16:00
Parallel sessions
Session. Assessing the quality and comparability of Homicide Statistics
  • Collecting and analyizing data: the experience of the Homicide Monitor by the Igarapé Institute
    Katherine Aguirre Tobón
    Instituto Igarápe, Brazil
  • Homicides, Human Development and Rule of Law indicators in the Americas
    Aldo Magoga, Independent Consultant
  • Homicide data quality in Latin America
    Ignacio Cano,
    Laboratory for the Analysis of Violence at the University of the State of Rio de Janeiro (LAV-UERJ), Brazil
  • Global homicide statistics: are they comparable?
    Michael Jandl, UNODC
Chaired by Antonio Mazzitelli, UNODC
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Violence against women: a complex framework
  • Critical Reflections on Violence Against Women
    Marylin Clark, University of Malta
  • Recent achievements from the Italian Violence Against Women survey: what changes and what not. Indications for policies
    Maria Giuseppina Muratore and Roberta Barletta, ISTAT, Italy
  • Evidence from gender based violence surveys of Turkey: Challenges and findings
    İlknur Yüksel-Kaptanoğlu,
    Hacettepe University Institute of Population Studies, Turkey
  • Who Kills Whom? Improving data collection on female homicide
    Marieke Liem, Leiden University, Netherlands
  • Violence against women in Latin America: a comparative analysis
    Claudia Garcia Moreno, WHO
Chaired by Verónica Zavala, IDB, México
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
16:00 - 17:30
Parallel sessions
Session. Institutional capacities for monitoring the Goal 16
  • Building institutional statistical capacities for monitoring the SDGs
    Rudolphe Petras, Paris21
  • Sustainable Development Goals and Praia Group on Governance Statistics
    Mariana Neves
    National Statistical Office, Cape Verde
  • NSOs producing data for monitoring Goal 16
    Robert Buluma,
    National Statistical Office, Kenya
  • Measuring Goal 16 indicators through Victimization Surveys
    Salomé Flores,
    INEGI UNODC Center of Excellence
  • Measuring corruption to promote sustainable development: where do we stand and where do we need to go?
    Giulia Mugellini,
    Universitat St. Gallen, Switzerland
Chaired by Adrian Franco, INEGI, Mexico
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Understanding the value of victims' experience : the case of juveniles
  • International and Latin American experiences with self-report surveys of delinquency,
    Christopher Birkbeck,
    University of Salford, United Kingdom
  • Risk behaviours and victimization experiences: an analysis on young people dwelling in urban areas in Mexico
    Oscar Jaimes
    INEGI, Mexico
  • Victimization, fear and violence between juveniles: the case of Chile
    Luis Vial, Ministry of Interior, Chile
Chaired by Javier Hernandez, UNODC
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
18:00 - 20:00
Latin America and the Caribbean Victimization Survey Initiative (LACSI)

Closed meeting
Sala de Usos Múltiples, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya

Friday 10th

Schedule
Session
Venue
09:00 - 10:20
Parallel sessions
Session. Crime Statistics : The case of Yucatan
  • Profiling Yucatan: an empirical assessment to its Public Safety context
    Guillermo Castillo
    INEGI, México
  • Indicators on insecurity perception and victimization in Merida
    Angelica Ramirez
    Interdisciplinary Institute of Legal Psychology, México
  • Social perception of therapeutic justice,
    José Paulino Dzib
    Interdisciplinary Institute of Legal Psychology, México
Chaired by Arturo Gómez, INEGI
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Integration of different crime data sources to understanding crime
  • Big data: Opportunities and challenges in developing an integrated statistical system
    Toni Makkai,
    Australian National University, Australia
  • Analyse the relationship between socio-economic inequalities, victimization and crime
    Riccardo Valente,
    Universitat de Barcelona, Spain
  • Integration and use of crime and justice data
    Viviana Guerra
    Ministry of Security Coordination, Ecuador
Chaired by Richard Wortley, UCL
 
10:30 - 12:00
Parallel sessions
Session. Crime statistical systems: The role of NSO's
  • Anibal Sánchez, INEI, Perú
  • Verónica Cuzco, INEC, Ecuador
  • Giuseppina Muratore, ISTAT, Italy
  • Mario Palma, INEGI, México
Chaired by James Lynch, University of Maryland, USA
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
Session. Presentation. Research paper on Violent Crime at the City Level in Latin America
  • Salomé Flores, INEGI UNODC Center of Excellence
  • Guillermo Castillo Koschnick, INEGI
  • Carlos Vilalta, CIDE
Chaired by José Antonio Mejía, Interamerican Development Bank
Oval Room, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
12:00 - 13:30
Session. How to evaluate the performance of the Criminal Justice Institutions ?
  • Use of the nested ANOVA to analyze the performance of judges in resolving criminal cases
    Mohammad H. Badii, UANL, Mexico
  • Ma. de los Ángeles Fromow
  • How to end up in prison in three steps (and two witnesses)
    Gustavo Fondevila, CIDE, Mexico
Chaired by Marcelo Bergman, National University of Tres de Febrero, Argentina
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
13:30 - 14:00
Session. Closing session
Auditorium, Gran Museo del Mundo Maya
cde.estadistica@unodc.org
Copyright ® 2016 UNODC,
All Rights Reserved, Legal Notice