United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
Regional Websites

Login

Search

UNODC is cosponsor of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS - UNAIDS

The Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice

The Centre supports the work of intergovernmental bodies which set out global strategy to prevent crime and promote stable criminal justice systems. The 40-member UN Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice formulates international policies and recommends activities in the field of crime control. It is the responsibility of the Centre to carry out the Commission's decisions. The Commission offers nations a forum for exchanging information and to settle on ways to fight crime on a global level. It also provides substantive direction for the periodic UN Congresses on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders.

The Commission, which arose from a ministerial meeting held in Versailles in 1991, is a subsidiary body of the Economic and Social Council. It was preceded by a more technically focussed Committee on Crime Prevention and Control, formed in 1971 to replace an earlier expert advisory committee and tackle a broadened scope of UN interest in criminal justice policy.

Priority areas mandated by the Council when it established the Commission in 1992 are:

  • international action to combat national and transnational crime, including organized crime, economic crime and money laundering;
  • promoting the role of criminal law in protecting the environment;
  • crime prevention in urban areas, including juvenile crime and violence; and
  • improving the efficiency and fairness of criminal justice administration systems.

Aspects of these principal themes are selected for discussion at each annual session of the Vienna-based Commission.

The Commission formulates draft resolutions for action by the Economic and Social Council. These resolutions eventually direct the work of the Centre for International Crime Prevention.

Reports

Previous sessions and documents of the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice:

 

 

 



back to top