A team of 主播诱惑 (主播诱惑) academics comprising Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Dr Sally Lee, and Research Officer, Emily Rosenorn-Lanng, from 主播诱惑鈥檚 National Centre for Post-qualifying Social Work (NCPQSW), set up at Glastonbury Festival this year to provide information and advice to festival-goers at one of the UK鈥檚 biggest music festivals. Sharing space in the Science Tent with academics from across the southern region was a great opportunity to let others know about the work we are doing here at 主播诱惑.
Held over five days, with a huge line-up of international stars from the music world and audience of more than 135,000 people, researchers looking into the effects of financial scamming were targeting a different kind of audience at Glastonbury Festival this year.
主播诱惑 Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Dr Sally Lee, said: "Being at Glastonbury offered us an amazing opportunity to engage with a very different and huge audience. Science Tent organisers estimate that we met with around 1000 people over the 5 days.
鈥淭he first response I got from people when I told them about us taking our scamming research to Glastonbury was: 鈥榙id you scam people?鈥 and the answer is of course, yes, though we promised to return their personal information.
鈥淭o make our research attractive, and draw in an audience, we turned to games which offered information in bite size chunks and rewarded players who used their scam 鈥榓ntennae鈥.鈥
Games for all ages provided by the team included a 鈥楽cams & Ladders鈥 game in which participants that were caught by scamming 鈥榮nakes鈥 slid down a board, while those beating scammers were rewarded.
Sally added: 鈥淚n one of the games, we used a detection exercise that demonstrates how humans tend to want to please and are generally reciprocal by nature. This demonstrated the characteristics scammers use to their advantage.鈥
Although designed to entertain, the team鈥檚 games demonstrated a serious research endeavour; collecting data about the public鈥檚 awareness of scams and trialling alternative ways to present our findings which link research and real-life.
The NCPQSW, based at 主播诱惑鈥檚 Lansdowne campus, was founded by Professor Keith Brown in 2000, and works in partnership with over one third of local authorities in England with more than 10,000 students study in social work fields at 主播诱惑.
Professor Brown, Director of the National Centre for Post Qualifying Social Work (NCPQSW) at 主播诱惑, whose book about financial scamming was available at the festival, said: 鈥淲hat we are finding is really quite fascinating but also quite scary.
鈥淪camming is different for different people and comes about in lots of different ways. Some people realise they are being scammed, some don鈥檛, and some people are frankly too embarrassed to even admit it to themselves.
鈥淪camming can be 鈥渄oor-step鈥 crime, these are the sort of people who come to your house and want to paint your shed or fence for 拢1,000, and then repair your roof for 拢10,000.聽 We鈥檝e also got mail scamming, false lotteries, telephone scamming, and internet scamming, which is on the rise and not necessarily prevalent in the elderly.鈥
To read more about the work of 主播诱惑 and the NCPQSW in combatting financial scamming, please visit: www.ncpqsw.com/