This is the first journal of the Be Secure Feel Secure (BSFS) project since its start on 2020, led by the Municipality of Piraeus. The BSFS project is part of the UIA initiatives aiming to improve security in European cities.
Piraeus is a historical city, located in the Attica Region near Athens - only few kilometers to the south-west of the center of Athens. It is the largest & busiest port in Greece, and it is among the biggest European ports and the main hub connecting Europe, Asia and Africa. It is also among the most densely populated cities in Europe (15,065 citizens/km2). It is a boisterous zone, and like in many large cities, security is an important issue for its inhabitants. According to a recent poll to the inhabitants of Piraeus, security is among the top 3 problems of the city.
The urban threat landscape in Piraeus is mainly comprised by small scale crime (i.e. pickpockets, thieves), night crime activities, drug and cigarettes smuggling and immigrants’ trafficking. These events are hardly reported to the authorities due to the lack of transparency, cross-sectoral cooperation, and exploitation of cyber-physical flaws. The built environment is also in need of improvements, and thus has a negative impact on how the city is perceived. BSFS project aims to strengthen urban security and address the perception of security in the city by providing strategies & tools to link the main urban security stakeholders & facilitate their collaboration in physical-and-cyber space.
With this in mind, BSFS has defined the 2nd and 5th municipal departments within Piraeus as its areas of implementation.
2nd (left) and 5th (right) municipal districts.
These targeted areas are characterized by its commercial activity, but also for:
- Low social cohesion
- High population density
- Sense of degradation
- Fear of crime
- Environmental degradation & urban design.
- Weak collaboration among the critical information systems of the urban authority, the police and other key stakeholders is associated to the almost non-existent interoperability, entailing information losses and hampering timely reaction of the first responders.
This first year, BSFS the project has started to tackle the issue of reliable information on criminal incidence by taking the first steps for the creation of the CURiM platform - a digital tool to assess cyberthreats, and to manage and analyze data of criminal incidence involving citizen communication and official sources -such as police statistics. On the other hand, a survey was carried out by the Panteion University aimed to both households and commerce owners of the targeted districts to better understand their perceptions of security, the trust in local authorities, and their potential involvement on community-based crime policy.
In terms of cross-sectoral cooperation, this first year BSFS established the Local Council for Crime Prevention (LCCP), where municipality representatives, police officers, and scientific experts participate, communicate, and decide on strategies to tackle crime.
Throughout the process, social actions have been carried out, such as the communication with local associations and other organisms that work close to the citizens, such as commerce owners, schools, universities, and the general public. Finally, the starting-off points for addressing the issue of the image of the built environment have been set. This will encompass spatial interventions applying CPTED (Crime Prevention through Environmental Design) methodology -such as image management and target hardening. These actions will join the social actions to enhance community cohesion at a neighborhood level and improve the perception of security.
In the following sections we will explore each of the 7 implementation challenges: Leadership, Public Procurement, Organizational Arrangements, Participative Approach, Monitoring & Evaluation, Communication with Beneficiaries, and Upscaling.
Considering this project involves both actions concerning digital tools and activities with inhabitants of the districts of Piraeus, the COVID-19 restrictions have impacted the project’s development in several ways that will be explained for each challenge.
Partnership:
- Municipality of Piraeus
- Singular Logic SA (SLG)
- Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences – Department of Social Science – Criminology Lab
- University of Piraeus Research Center (UPRC) – Department of informatics
- European Forum for Urban Security (EFUS)
- SPACE Hellas (SPACE)
- Ministry of Citizen Protection - Police (MCP)