The CJS in England and Wales uses a commonly agreed set of data standards to support ICT communications between the systems used by criminal justice organisations (CJOs). These data standards are designed specifically to support the operation of the CJS. They are to be used with open data standards as defined in the government’s Open Standards Principles. The government’s open standards are selected by the Cabinet Office standards hub.
Common data standards are used by CJOs, their ICT suppliers and potential suppliers wishing to bid for CJS contracts. They are also used to support the data analytics of criminal justice information.
The selection of the CJS data standards is made by the CJS Data Standards Forum. This is a technical forum which has representatives from the principal CJOs.
Geography
The CJS data standards apply to all CJOs in England and Wales.
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The catalogue contains data standards to support the exchange of criminal justice information between different CJOs. Only the latest version of the catalogue is current. Earlier versions of the catalogue are provided to:
track changes between the different versions to help organisations understand the practical implications of the ‘before’ and ‘after’ versions of altered standards
provide historical versions of the standards, especially those with lists of values, which may be used for historical reporting purposes and statistical analysis of historical data
How to use the catalogue
Use the CJS data standards when sending criminal justice information from one CJO to another. The data standards don’t have to be used within CJOs.
Options for implementing the CJS data standards
Each CJO can decide how to implement the standards. It can either
map its internal data standards to the criminal justice data standards when sending information to a different CJO
adopt one or more of the CJS data standards as its internal data standard. This avoids the costs and performance impacts of mapping to the CJS data standards when sending information to a different CJO
Each CJO should make its decision on how to use the CJS data standards based on the contribution those standards make both in terms of the system’s functional and non-functional requirements and in the context of a total cost of ownership model.
Ensuring CJS data standards implementation
To ensure that the CJS data standards are used, CJOs should contractually specify that:
suppliers comply with the CJS data standards for the transmission of information both for ICT development and during service management
ICT suppliers monitor the CJS data standards web pages and always use the latest versions of those standards
the latest version of the CJS data standards is downloaded directly from the CJS data standards web pages
suppliers subscribe to receive updates to the CJS data standards
Subscribing to updates of this page will give you notifications of:
new versions of the catalogue
new versions of standards which have yet to be entered into a new version of the catalogue
updates to code lists
CJOs should also consider mapping the data standards to any supporting technical documentation such as logical data models and interface specifications.
Types of data standard
The catalogue includes 3 different types of data standard:
formatting standards
organisational structure standards
reference data standards
Formatting standards
These are concerned with the structure of a common type of data item such as dates or notes fields in a message or a database table. Use the common format for such items when you send information between different organisations. Formatting standards don’t have lists of actual values associated with them.
Organisational structure standards
Organisational structure standards describe the logical structure of an organisation. You can use these to work out the allocation of responsibilities in that they uniquely identify organisational units. This helps the correct transmission of information from one part of a CJO to part of a different CJO. Use organisational structure standards also to support reporting.
Reference data standards
A reference data standard categorises other data by using a commonly accepted list of mutually exclusive values. For example, a record for a person might include the person’s gender by use of the reference data standard ‘Gender Type Code’. Using a common list of such values across the CJS helps create a shared understanding of the correct interpretation of such classifications.
Code lists for data standards
Many of the lists for the reference data standards and organisational structure standards are comparatively small. In those cases the complete list for that standard is given in the catalogue.
A smaller number of standards are either too large to put in the catalogue or are subject to comparatively frequent change. In either of these cases the CJO that stewards the specific standard must provide that list. Each data standard in the catalogue specifies the organisation that acts as its steward.
Where the stewarding body is the Data Standards Forum itself, or where the body falls under the remit of the Ministry of Justice (MOJ), the lists of the data values are provided here.
Code lists for reference data standards
The lists of data values for reference data standards managed either by the Data Standards Forum or MOJ which are not in the catalogue are:
The lists of data values for organisational structure standards are all elements of the ‘Organisation Unit (OU) Identifier’ structure of the data standards catalogue. The top level codes are specified in the catalogue. Elements below the top level are managed separately by the various CJOs. The code lists for HMCTS magistrates and Crown Courts are given below:
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CJS standards and open standards
The CJS data standards are sector specific. Any interested party can use them, subject to the Open Government Licence. They are different from the open standards selected for government IT. The open standards are at the Cabinet Office’s standards hub.
If there’s a choice between the 2, then open standards must take precedence as they are mandated by Cabinet Office policy.
Engaging with the Data Standards Forum
The CJS Data Standards Forum undertakes technical management of the CJS data standards. All of the principal CJOs are represented on the forum.
If you’re a member of a CJO, contact your forum representative for any issues related to CJS data standards. This includes queries about particular standards, change requests to existing standards or requirements for new standards.
Suppliers should contact their contracting CJO to raise any issues relating to the CJS data standards. In turn, the CJO should contact their representative on the forum.
There are 2 types of process which could result in a change to the CJS Data Standards catalogue:
a CJO can raise a change request to create, update or retire a data standard
forum representatives may initiate changes as part of a continued review process of the contents of the catalogue.
Continued review
The Data Standards Forum continuously reviews the catalogue as a standing action. The aim is to produce a set of standards that is as small as possible while still being fit for purpose. It contributes to the ‘Value for Money’ agenda by focusing on existing business need to reduce the costs of compliance. Each forum meeting reviews a number of the standards to ensure that they’re relevant and meet the business need.
Notification of changes
Changes to standards will be posted here. They will stay here until they’ve been included into a new version of the catalogue.
Updates to this page
Published 6 October 2014
Last updated 1019 FebruaryMarch 2025
+ show all updates
10 February 2025
CJS national court codes 12 published.
23 December 2024
CJS Offence Index December 2024 published.
9 December 2024
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v37.0 published
17 September 2024
CJS Offence Index September 2024 published.
21 June 2024
CJS Offence Index: June 2024 published.
18 March 2024
CJS offence index - March 2024 published.
3 January 2024
Updated with CJS Offence Index December 2023
2 October 2023
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v36.0 published.
21 September 2023
CJS Offence Index: September 2023 published.
21 September 2023
CJS national court codes 11 published.
20 September 2023
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v35.0 and CJS national court codes 10 published.
3 August 2023
CJS Offence Index: July 2023 published.
23 March 2023
CJS Offence Index: March 2023 published.
23 December 2022
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v33.0 published.
23 December 2022
CJS Offence Index: December 2022 published.
22 September 2022
CJS Offence Index: September 2022 published.
21 June 2022
CJS Offence Index: June 2022 published.
25 March 2022
CJS Offence Index document updated
3 November 2021
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v32.0 published.
1 November 2021
Postcode to national court code map 10.0 published.
15 September 2021
CJS Offence Index: September 2021 published.
7 July 2021
CJS result codes v.10 published.
29 June 2021
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v31 published.
24 June 2021
CJS Offence Index: June 2021 published.
23 June 2021
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v30.0 published.
14 June 2021
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v29.0 published.
24 March 2021
CJS Offence Index March 2021 published.
25 February 2021
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v26.0 published.
17 December 2020
CJS Courts BC OU Codes v25.0 published.
16 December 2020
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v24.0 published
16 December 2020
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v23.0 published.
16 November 2020
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v22.0 published.
26 October 2020
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v21.0 published.
15 September 2020
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v20.0 published.
3 September 2020
CJS result codes v.9 and CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v19.0 updated.
1 September 2020
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v19.0 published.
10 August 2020
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v18.0 published.
27 July 2020
CJS National court codes v9.0, CJS Courts BC OU Codes v17.0, CJS Result Codes v9.0, CJS Result Qualifiers v8.0 published.
15 June 2020
CJS national court codes, CJSE Courts BC OU Codes and CJS result qualifiers files updated.
28 April 2020
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v16.0 published.
3 February 2020
CJS data standards catalogue 6.0 published.
24 December 2019
CJS result codes updated
26 April 2019
CJSE Courts BC OU Codes v15.0 published.
18 March 2019
CJS Result Codes updated.
20 February 2019
CJS result codes v7.1 published
31 January 2019
CJSE courts BC OU codes v14.0 published.
19 March 2018
Self defined ethnicity – 18+1’ standard document published.
26 September 2017
CJS National Court Codes updated.
7 July 2017
CJSE courts BC OU codes v11.0 published.
4 July 2017
CJSE courts BC OU codes v10.0 published.
22 March 2017
CJSE courts BC OU codes v9.0 published.
20 March 2017
Postcodes to national court codes documents updated.
25 November 2016
CJSE courts BC OU codes v8.0 document published.
13 January 2016
Updated 'CJS National Court Codes 8' and 'Postcode National Court Codes 8' files added to page.
7 August 2015
Updated 'CJS National Court Codes 7' and 'Postcode National Court Codes 7' files added to page.
18 March 2015
Case Marker Descriptive v.2, Offence Initiation Code v.4 and National Court Codes v.6.0 added.
17 February 2015
Postcode to national court code map 6.0 added (both .ods and .zip versions)
CJS Result Codes v. 6.3 added (both .ods and .zip versions)
Legal Aid Status.pdf added
28 January 2015
Further data standards added: CJS National Court Codes 5.4.ods; CJS National Court Codes 5.4.zip;v National Court Code.pdf