Beyond the headlines

What the public (actually) think about crime and justice

Please note this interactive page is in BETA and will be updated regularly.

Britons want major change to the justice system

% of each voter segment saying the criminal justice system needs major changes — a view held by a clear majority across every part of society.

64%
of all Britons want major change
By segment

Source: Course Correction, More in Common / Common Ground Justice Project, 2025.

Does going to prison reduce reoffending?

Explore how different parts of the public view prison’s impact on whether someone commits another crime.

Britons are more likely to think prison increases reoffending than reduces it – and no segment thinks it works well.

Only 1 in 5 Britons believe prison makes someone less likely to commit another crime – scepticism that cuts across political lines, extending even to the most punishment-first segments.

30%
say prison makes reoffending more likely
35%
say prison has no impact on reoffending
21%
say prison makes reoffending less likely

Source: Common Ground Justice Project & More in Common, national poll Feb–Mar 2025 (n=1,998 GB adults).

Punishment vs Rehabilitation

Punishment vs Rehabilitation

We asked the public whether they prioritise punishment or rehabilitation, on a scale of 1 to 5, where 1 was fully punishment and 5 was fully rehabilitation. Britons broadly fall into three groups in their attitudes towards criminal justice reform: the punishment-first group (45 per cent of Britons), the balancer group (29 per cent of Britons) and the rehabilitation-first group (26 per cent of Britons).

Punishment-first · 45%
Loyal Nationals
Mean score: 2.19 / 5
Loyal Nationals
Disengaged Traditionalists
Mean score: 2.32 / 5
Disengaged Traditionalists
Backbone Conservatives
Mean score: 2.34 / 5
Backbone Conservatives
Balancers · 29%
Disengaged Battlers
Mean score: 2.71 / 5
Disengaged Battlers
Civic Pragmatists
Mean score: 3.13 / 5
Civic Pragmatists
Established Liberals
Mean score: 3.18 / 5
Established Liberals
Rehabilitation-first · 26%
Progressive Activists
Mean score: 3.80 / 5
Progressive Activists
1 – Prioritise punishment 5 – Prioritise rehabilitation

Source: Course Correction, More in Common / Common Ground Justice Project, 2025.

Punishment vs Rehabilitation – British Seven Segments
Punishment vs rehabilitation – by segment

Please indicate which of the following statements comes closer to your view, using a scale of 1 to 5 where 1 indicates you agree fully with the first statement and 5 indicates you agree fully with the second statement.

1 – Prioritise punishment
2
3
4
5 – Prioritise rehabilitation
← Punishment Rehabilitation →

Source: Course Correction, More in Common / Common Ground Justice Project, 2025.

Course Correction · Common Ground Justice Project & More in Common, 2025

What should the criminal justice system prioritise?

% selecting each priority (up to 3 choices) — click a segment to explore different views and watch priorities shift

The national picture: Britons across all segments broadly agree on accountability and proportionality, but differ sharply on rehabilitation and early intervention.
0%10%20%30%40%50%

Source: Common Ground Justice Project & More in Common, national poll Feb–Mar 2025 (n=1,998 GB adults). Full data: moreincommon.org.uk · Report: commongroundjustice.uk

Support for expanding use of community sentences

Net support for using community sentences instead of prison for certain offenders, by voter segment — and the impact of adding a prison backstop for non-compliance.

Net support (without backstop) Additional support with prison backstop

Source: More in Common, March 2025  ·  Net support = % support minus % oppose
Prison backstop: if an offender does not comply with their community sentence, it could become a prison sentence.