Comprehensive Police Training
We provide residential training courses at Cambridge, but also deliver face-to-face training in Forces in the UK and abroad. We also provide numerous online training courses with face-to-face tutorials which are designed for police analysts and police leaders.
Available Courses
Criminal Network Analysis Course
Duration: Tuesday, 12th to Friday, 15th January 2027
Cost: Starts at £1,637
This face-to-face residential course is intended to prepare investigative, analytic or operational professionals in policing to use the tools of criminal network analysis in policing of high-harm crimes.
If Prevention is the what, Problem Solving is the how: The Practical Application & Implementation of a Problem-Oriented Policing Approach
Duration: Monday, 21st to Friday, 25th September 2026
Cost: Starts at £1,350
This course has primarily been designed for those involved in the practical application, support, and ownership of problem solving and prevention in police forces.
Statistics for Evidence-Based Policing
Duration: Tuesday, 8th to Thursday, 10th September 2026
Cost: Starts at £620
This course is aimed at police analysts and those conducting research in Evidence-Based Policing. The course begins with basic descriptive statistics so is suitable for those with little prior knowledge of statistics.
Policing Responses to Domestic Abuse and Violence Against Women and Girls. The evidence so far, what’s been tested, what works, and what’s promising
Duration: Awaits new date
Cost: Starts at £1,100
The course will present the evidence on what works in the Policing response to DA and VAWG. The course will support attendees in critically examining proposals they may be asked to consider, fund or evaluate. The course will discuss the evidence on what works, what backfires and the emerging research that is promising.
Policing with Procedural Justice
Duration: Awaits new date
Cost: Starts at £730
The course is aimed at first and second-line supervisors who are responsible for the delivery of operational policing in their area and want to deliver policing services in a more procedurally just way in order to reap the benefits this approach delivers.
Targeting Risks of Serious Violence Course
Duration: Awaits new date
Cost: Starts at £1,350
How do we identify the people and places at highest risks of serious violence? How do we update those forecasts, every day, to better use police resources to prevent crime? The answer lies in more and better crime analysis.
Policing with Procedural Justice: Cambridge Online Procedural Justice Course
Duration: 16 weeks
Cost: Starts at £460
The course is aimed at front line officers and supervisors who are responsible for the delivery of operational policing in their area. It is also suitable for leaders who want to deliver policing services in a more procedurally just way to reap the benefits of this approach: improved trust and confidence in Policing, more support from the public, less use of force, more legitimacy, improved workforce morale.
Hot Spots Policing for PCs and PCSOs: Cambridge Online Course
Duration: 16 weeks
Cost: Starts at £345
This course focuses on the principles of Evidence-Based Policing and the best practice in Hot Spots Policing with PCs and PCSOs.
Integrating Hot Spot Policing into Problem Oriented Policing, designing and evaluating policing experiments
Duration: 16 weeks
Cost: Starts at £499
This course is intended for analysts and police leaders responsible for designing, delivering and evaluating their Force’s responses to hot spots of harm.
Policing To Reduce Serious Violence: The Cambridge Online EBP Leaders’ Short Course
Duration: 16 weeks
Cost: Starts at £485
How do we identify the people and places at highest risks of serious violence? How do we update those forecasts, every day, to better use police resources to prevent crime? The answer lies in more evidence-based crime analysis for proactive strategies.
Targeting Risks of Serious Violence: The Cambridge Online Course for Police Analysts
Duration: 16 weeks
Cost: Starts at £985
How do we identify the people and places at highest risks of serious violence? How do we update those forecasts every day, to better use police resources to prevent crime? The answer lies in more evidence-based crime analysis for proactive strategies.