Effective and efficient crime investigation and detection complement preventive
approaches in containing criminal activity. A good record on detecting crime is
important for maintaining public confidence in policing services, since victims and
other citizens expect culprits to be brought to justice. Policing provides deterrence
through the offender’s fear of being caught (von Hirsch et al. 1999)—the same threat
that underlies prevention via guardianship or guardianship objects, much of which is
aligned with routine activity theory (Cohen and Felson 1979). Even with existing levels
of crime investigation and detection in combination with preventive approaches,
crimes of all types—property, violent and sexual—persist in substantial quantities in
many developed countries, not least in Australia and the UK, where most of the evidence
presented in this volume originates. Preventive approaches appear unlikely to
be capable of combating offending alone without effective police capacity to detect
crime. Cost-effective crime investigation and detection is not merely important; it is
an indispensable part of any crime reduction strategy, both directly in terms of the
arrest and rehabilitation of criminals and indirectly through deterrence and enhancing
perceptions of police professionalism and legitimacy.