Congress
|
Year
|
Host City
|
Focus
|
Notes
|
1st Congress[4][5]
|
1955
|
Geneva, Switzerland
|
- "Open" penal and correctional facilities
- The selection and training of prison personnel
- The proper use of prison labor
- The impact of mass media on juvenile deviance
|
Adopted the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners[6]
|
2nd Congress[5]
|
1960
|
London, United Kingdom
|
- Short-term imprisonment
- The integration of prison labor with national economies
- The remuneration of prisoners
- Pre-release treatment and assistance to dependents of prisoners
- Parole and released prisoners' transition to community life
- After care, including vocational guidance, training and placement
- The role of national planning in preventing crime
|
|
3rd Congress[5]
|
1965
|
Stockholm, Sweden
|
- Social change and criminality
- Social forces and the prevention of criminality
- Community action for preventing crime
- Special preventative and treatment measures for juveniles and young adults
- Measures to reduce recidivism
|
|
4th Congress[5]
|
1970
|
Kyoto, Japan
|
- Social defense policies in relation to development planning
- Public participation in crime prevention and control of crime and delinquency
- The organization of research for policy development in social defense
- Developments in the correctional field
|
|
5th Congress[5]
|
1975
|
Geneva, Switzerland
|
- Offenses involving works of art and other cultural property
- Criminality associated with alcoholism and drug use
- Interpersonal violence
- Criminality associated with migration and flight from natural disasters and hostilities
- Female criminality
- Terrorism
|
Adopted the Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Being Subjected to Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment[7]
|
6th Congress[5]
|
1980
|
Caracas, Venezuela
|
- Crime trends and crime prevention strategies
- Improvement of crime statistics
- Development of minimum standards of juvenile justice
- Measures to put an end to torture and extra-legal executions
- De-institutionalization of corrections and community measures
- Specific needs of women prisoners
|
|
7th Congress[5]
|
1985
|
Milan, Italy
|
|
Adopted:
|
8th Congress[5]
|
1990
|
Havana, Cuba
|
|
Adopted:
|
9th Congress[5]
|
1995
|
Cairo, Egypt
|
- Action against transnational and organized crime
- The role of criminal law in the protection of the environment
- Criminal justice and police systems
- Crime prevention strategies in urban areas
- Youth crime
|
|
10th Congress[5]
|
2000
|
Vienna, Austria
|
- The rule of law and the strengthening of the criminal justice system
- International cooperation in combating transnational organized crime
- Effective crime prevention
- Combating corruption
- Crimes relating to the computer network
- Community involvement in crime prevention
- Women in the criminal justice system
|
Adopted the Vienna Declaration on Crime and Justice: Meeting the Challenges of the Twenty-first Century[19]
|
11th Congress[5]
|
2005
|
Bangkok, Thailand
|
- Effective measures to combat transnational organized crime
- Economic and financial crime: challenges to sustainable development
- Corruptions: threats and trends in the twenty-first century
- International cooperation against terrorism and links between terrorism and other criminal activities
- Standard-setting in crime prevention and criminal justice
|
Adopted the Bangkok Declaration on Synergies and Responses: Strategic Alliances in Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice[20]
|
12th Congress[21]
|
2010
|
Salvador, Brazil
|
|
|
13th Congress[22]
|
2015
|
Doha, Qatar
|
|
Adopted the Doha Declaration on Integrating Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice into the Wider United Nations Agenda to Address Social and Economic Challenges and to Promote the Rule of Law at the National and International Levels, and Public Participation[23]
|
14th Congress[24][25]
|
2021
|
Kyoto, Japan
|
Overall theme: "Advancing crime prevention, criminal justice and the rule of law: towards the achievement of the 2030 Agenda"
- Evidence-based crime prevention: statistics, indicators and evaluation in support of successful practices
- Reducing reoffending: identifying risks and developing solutions
- Education and youth engagement as key to making societies resilient to crime
- Current crime trends, recent developments and emerging solutions, in particular new technologies as means for and tools against crime
|
Postponed by the General Assembly due to concerns surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic.[26]
|