Crime science was conceived by the British broadcaster
Nick Ross in the late 1990s (with encouragement from the then Commissioner of the
Metropolitan Police, Sir John Stevens and Professor Ken Pease) out of concern that traditional criminology and orthodox political discourse were doing little to influence the ebb and flow of crime (e.g. Ross: Police Foundation Lecture, London, 11 July 2000 (jointly with Sir John Stevens);
Parliamentary and Scientific Committee, 22 March 2001; Barlow Lecture, UCL, 6 April 2005). Ross described crime science as, "examining the chain of events that leads to crime in order to cut the weakest link" (
Royal Institution Lecture 9 May 2002). ==Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science==