Bringing Victims Into Community Policing


Book Description

This publication focuses on the role of crime victims in advancing community policing. It includes first responder guides to dealing with victims, a model policy for the prevention of repeat victimization, and the benefits of developing relationships between the police, crime victims, and victim organizations.




Bringing Victims Into Community Policing


Book Description

This project started with the premise that community policing (CP) would be enhanced by the develop. of a stronger relation'p. between crime victims (CV) & police. A collab. problem-solving relationship between police & CV (& CV org.) could strengthen crime control, & contribute to reducing the fear of crime in communities. The project team surveyed 100s of police & CV org., visited promising programs, & conducted a lit. review to understand relationships between police & CV. Also conducted focus groups with rep. from victim serv. & police org., & held a forum with rep. from CV services, policing, & academia. "CP can be greatly enhanced by working to prevent repeat victimization & building collab. problem solving relation. with CV & victim org."




Bringing Victims Into Community Policing


Book Description

This publication focuses on the role of crime victims in advancing community policing. It includes first responder guides to dealing with victims, a model policy for the prevention of repeat victimization, and the benefits of developing relationships between the police, crime victims, and victim organizations.




Bringing Victims Into Community Policing


Book Description

This publication focuses on the role of crime victims in advancing community policing. It includes first responder guides to dealing with victims, a model policy for the prevention of repeat victimization, and the benefits of developing relationships between the police, crime victims, and victim organizations.










Global Issues in Contemporary Policing


Book Description

This book addresses six areas of policing: performance management, professional and academic partnerships, preventing and fighting crime and terrorism, immigrant and multicultural populations, policing the police, and cyber-security. The book contains the most current and ground-breaking research across the world of policing with contributors from over 20 countries. It is also a suitable reference or textbook in a special topics course. It consists of edited versions of the best papers presented at the IPES annual meeting in Budapest.




The Police-mental Health Partnership


Book Description

Many of our children live in communities where violence, fear, and despair are commonplace. This book describes how one city developed a collaborative effort between law-enforcement and mental health professionals in order to help these children and their families. The Child Development-Community Policing Program in New Haven, Connecticut, was initiated in 1991 to deal more effectively with children who are victims or perpetrators of violence. Police officers, preparing for the new responsibilities of community-based policing, have become familiar with an array of strategies for preventing and responding to community violence. Mental health professionals have learned firsthand about the texture and trauma of the lives of children at risk. Police and mental health professionals working together have been able to mobilize treatment services more quickly and effectively and to assure that treatment plans are carried out. This manual provides a model, case studies, and guidelines for training the participants, operating a consultation service, and evaluating the program on an ongoing basis, all of which will be useful for other communities seeking to implement a similar project.







Restorative Policing


Book Description

The focus of restorative policing is within a community-oriented policing approach, where the police have important tasks in rendering services to the population. Traditional forms of penal treatment no longer satisfy entirely, especially in relation to nuisances, incivilities, and petty crime. Is the community police officer the simple 'registrator' of events between victim and offender? Can s/he take the role of mediator, or can s/he refer to external instances in the domain of mediation or to civil judges? Do the police have their own restorative regulations and institutionalized practices, and are they involved in mediation in penal matters? In what ways do police officers contribute to informal restorative practices and conflict resolution in neighborhoods? This book is about restorative policing practices, and the place and role police forces can take in this kind of approach.