European Journal of Policing Studies

Article

Changing stop and search in Scotland

Keywords Stop and search, Police Scotland, Procedural justice
Authors Megan O’Neill en Elizabeth Aston
DOI
Author's information

Megan O’Neill
Dr Megan O’Neill is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Dundee. She has an extensive background of policing research in the UK and in the EU. Dr O’Neill’s work has included conducting studies of football policing, Black Police Associations, community policing, partnership working, Police Community Support Officers and stop and search (corresp: m.oneill@dundee.ac.uk).

Elizabeth Aston
Dr Elizabeth Aston is the Director of the Scottish Institute for Policing Research and a Senior Lecturer in Criminology at Edinburgh Napier University. Her research focuses on local policing and stop and search, with a particular interest in engagement, partnerships and intersections between criminal justice and other policy areas such as health, e.g. policing and substance use.
  • Abstract

      Compared to other areas in the UK, stop and search in Scotland was on a disproportionately large scale prior to 2015 and targeted children and young people. Scottish police officers conducted more non-statutory searches than statutory, putting into question the legitimacy of this tactic. In response to external pressures, a revised approach to stop and search was developed and piloted in the Fife Division of Police Scotland from June 2014 to January 2015. Our evaluation of this pilot found that while some elements were an improvement on current practice, the use of non-statutory searches and disproportionate searches of children continued. Since our evaluation, practice in stop and search in Scotland has undergone dramatic change. This paper will discuss the contribution of the Fife Pilot and our evaluation to changes to stop and search in Scotland. It will consider the relevance of procedural justice to developments in this area of service delivery, which will be of benefit to practitioners and policy makers internationally.

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