17
Community Policing

Community Policing

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Community Policing. Developed in Response. To the changes that put police in cars and removed them from neighborhoods To understanding that modern law enforcement has not been able to make communities safer (for the most part) or to reduce fear of crime - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Community Policing

Community Policing

Page 2: Community Policing

Developed in Response● To the changes that put police in cars and

removed them from neighborhoods● To understanding that modern law enforcement

has not been able to make communities safer (for the most part) or to reduce fear of crime

● To the recognition that both the extent and nature of crime in our communities require different police strategies

Page 3: Community Policing

It requires:● the active participation of local government, civic

and business leaders, and public officials● fundamental changes in the structure and

management of police organizations● that police goals be expanded beyond crime

control and prevention● that police use a wide variety of methods to

achieve these goals.

Page 4: Community Policing

Two Core Components

Focus on:● community partnerships● problem solving instead of crime

fighting

It is a philosophy more so than a specific set of actions.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAf23H2Dz7I

Page 5: Community Policing

Examples● Community Coordinated Responses● Family Justice Units● Specialized Domestic Violence Officers/Units

Page 6: Community Policing

Coordinated Response Model● Duluth – Pioneer in the Field ● Interagency Communication and Cooperation key to the

process● Usually established a task force model whereby all

stakeholders come to the table to coordinate the responses of all stakeholders

● Key Components: Establish Philosophical Approach; Networking/Interagency Communication and Cooperation; Policy/Protocol Development; Support for Victims; Accountability; Evaluation

Page 7: Community Policing

Philosophical Approach● Creating a coherent philosophical approach that

makes victim safety the most important goal ● Eliminate victim blaming (attitudes and practices)● Ask why should she use the system?● Understanding that the perpetrator is responsible● Examine all reforms to look for unintended

consequences that may put the victim in harm’s way

Page 8: Community Policing

Networking/Interagency Communication and Cooperation

● Interagency dialogue is a must● The process of setting up any Council

is critical● Regular, focused meetings

Page 9: Community Policing

Policy/Protocol Development

● Focus on agency accountability● Focus on individual accountability● Helps ensure that change is lasting –

beyond individuals who may leave agencies

Page 10: Community Policing

● Ensures that all essential services exist, identifies needs, and targets funding and implementation in areas where services are lacking

● Asks: How does this practice improve or impair a victim’s protection and safety?

Support for Victims

Page 11: Community Policing

Accountability● Provides opportunities for treatment and change

of offenders, but focus is always on accountability.

● Assesses all responses to ensure that batterers are held accountable at all levels.

● Holds agencies responsible for ensuring that batterers are held accountable

Page 12: Community Policing

Evaluate Progress● Collect data and use it to evaluate

changes● Willingness to change policies and

procedures in light of findings● Recognizing that some data will be difficult

to deal with

Page 13: Community Policing

● What will improve the community response?● What kind of resistance will there be to a different

proposal?● Why would that resistance be there?● Who are the key leaders to sell on trying something

new?● How could proposed changes backfire – for the

community, the police, the victim? ● What kind of training on the proposed changes will be

needed?● How can changes be institutionalized (policy/protocol?)

Key Questions

Page 14: Community Policing

Impact for Law Enforcement Officers:● Need to play an active role in working with

coordinating councils● Councils ultimately help officers because when

all systems work together: victims will be more apt to cooperate with officers in

arrest situations and be more apt to use the criminal justice system at all levels, and

officers will have more options at their disposal including referrals to service agencies that will respond effectively and ultimately reduce the need for victims to rely upon police response.

Page 15: Community Policing

Family Justice Centers (FJC)● Pioneered in San Diego. ● Are a place where all (or many) services for victims of

domestic violence are provided in one place● Reduces the burden of accessing multiple service

providers● Increases interagency coordination ● Services may include domestic violence advocacy,

prosecution, police, housing assistance, income assistance, civil legal assistance, medical assessment and/or treatment, and faith-based support.

Page 16: Community Policing

Specialized Domestic Violence Units/Officers

● In large police departments● May involve patrol officers, detectives,

crime analysts, victim advocates● Idea is that they become “specialists” in

the area● In smaller departments, one or two officers

can have these same role

Page 17: Community Policing

Ultimately● A police response that sees domestic violence

as integral to community policing and which engages with community wide responses will provide better services to victims, enhance police response, and help officers responding to calls for service.