Use Cases

UC1: Empowering individual organisations (LEAs, CSOs) with innovative tools and services

In a nutshell:

This use case will focus on the full exploitation of AMALTHEA innovative tools, to support more efficient understanding, identification and investigation of a wide range of extremis activities, especially related to the gender dynamics. It will comprise the needs and challenges of all LEAs and will validate AMALTHEA offerings to showcase how (and how much) these can indeed increase their capacities and the efficiency of prediction and response to such crimes; it will also offer CSOs access to innovative tools that will enable access to more comprehensive knowledge and societal impact analyses of such events. It will be based on 4 complementary scenarios, and each one of the LEAs will use the AMALTHEA interfaces to provide their exact needs and requirements for a specific event and will exploit the related knowledge delivery mechanisms and the decision support tools to enhance the efficiency of their operations.

In a nutshell:

This use case will focus on addressing the need for efficient collaboration links between different stakeholders of the wider judicial ecosystem and CSOs for gender-related radicalisation understanding, investigation and prevention, as well as data sharing between different organisations or departments within an agency, optimising knowledge sharing and management in data sharing procedures. Special focus will be given on facilitating collaboration with different actors, including social scientists and psychologists within CSOs. Policy drafting mechanisms will be validated in terms of providing innovative policy suggestions to further facilitate efficient collaborations; the types of crimes described in UC1 will be used as a basis for all scenarios.

UC3: Raising awareness, engaging citizens and training LEAs

In a nutshell:

This use case aims to validate and assess the AMALTHEA mechanisms that focus on raising awareness about the role of gender in radicalisation, engage the victims and all citizens somehow related to such crimes via the project’s community policing platform to facilitate the crimes’ identification and efficient investigation as well as the delivery of tailor-made, effective support to the victims (especially girls and women), and ensure that all related investigators in the wider ecosystem are well-informed, properly trained and re- or up-skilled so that they are capable of properly addressing all the legal and societal challenges related to such crimes.