Patricia Mayhew OBE is a British criminologist and civil servant. She was formerly the Deputy Head of the Crime and Criminal Justice Unit at the Home Office in the United Kingdom, as well as the director of the Crime and Justice Research Centre at the Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand from 2004 to 2008. Her other positions include working at the National Institute of Justice in Washington, D. C., United States and the Australian Institute of Criminology in Canberra, Australia. She was one of the designers of the original International Crime Victims Survey in 1982, and managed the survey until 2000. She was named an Officer of the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II in 1997, and was awarded the Stockholm Prize in Criminology jointly with fellow British criminologist Ronald V. Clarke in 2015, in honor of her and Clarke's work on situational crime prevention.[1] She had also worked closely with Clarke in implementing the first British Crime Survey in 1982.[2]
References
- ^ "Prize recipients 2015". Stockholm University. 2015. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
- ^ Sullivan, Robert R. (2008). Liberalism and Crime: The British Experience. Lexington Books. p. 31. ISBN 9780739129289. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
- Living people
- British women social scientists
- British criminologists
- British women criminologists
- 20th-century British civil servants
- 20th-century British women civil servants
- 21st-century British women civil servants
- Civil servants in the Home Office
- Academic staff of Victoria University of Wellington
- Winners of the Stockholm Prize in Criminology
- Officers of the Order of the British Empire
- British academic biography stubs