Kids, Cops and Communities


Book Description

This report is designed to help law enforcement administrators and officers understand and institute a strategy to help prevent violence -- community-oriented policing services carried out in collaboration with youth-serving organizations. Popular police prevention approaches such as DARE have helped prepare police officers to work hand in hand in a variety of ways with local affiliates of national youth-serving organizations. In a growing number of cities, police are working with youth groups and finding that violence involving youth is rapidly decreasing. The research involved a survey of 579 affiliates of 7 national youth-serving organizations.




Issues and Practices: Kids, Cops, and Communities


Book Description

The U.S. Department of Justice National Criminal Justice Reference Service present the full text of the document entitled "Issues and Practices: Kids, Cops, and Communities" in PDF format. The publication was written by Marcia R. Chaiken and published by the National Institute of Justice in June 1998. This report discusses how law enforcement administrators and officers can institute a strategy to help prevent violence by carrying out community-oriented policing services in collaboration with youth-serving organizations.




Kids, COPS, and Communities


Book Description




Keeping You Safe


Book Description

Describes some of the things that police officers do to help keep people safe.




The Last Neighborhood Cops


Book Description

In recent years, community policing has transformed American law enforcement by promising to build trust between citizens and officers. Today, three-quarters of American police departments claim to embrace the strategy. But decades before the phrase was coined, the New York City Housing Authority Police Department (HAPD) had pioneered community-based crime-fighting strategies. The Last Neighborhood Cops reveals the forgotten history of the residents and cops who forged community policing in the public housing complexes of New York City during the second half of the twentieth century. Through a combination of poignant storytelling and historical analysis, Fritz Umbach draws on buried and confidential police records and voices of retired officers and older residents to help explore the rise and fall of the HAPD's community-based strategy, while questioning its tactical effectiveness. The result is a unique perspective on contemporary debates of community policing and historical developments chronicling the influence of poor and working-class populations on public policy making.




Cops and Kids


Book Description

Juvenile courts were established in the early twentieth century with the ideal of saving young offenders from "delinquency." Many kids, however, never made it to juvenile court. Their cases were decided by a different agency--the police. Cops and Kids analyzes how police regulated juvenile behavior in turn-of-the-century America. Focusing on Los Angeles, Chicago, and Detroit, it examines how police saw their mission, how they dealt with public demands, and how they coped daily with kids. Whereas most scholarship in the field of delinquency has focused on progressive-era reformers who created a separate juvenile justice system, David B. Wolcott's study looks instead at the complicated, sometimes coercive, relationship between police officers and young offenders. Indeed, Wolcott argues, police officers used their authority in a variety of ways to influence boys' and girls' behavior. Prior to the creation of juvenile courts, police officers often disciplined kids by warning and releasing them, keeping them out of courts. Establishing separate juvenile courts, however, encouraged the police to cast a wider net, pulling more young offenders into the new system. While some departments embraced "child-friendly" approaches to policing, others clung to rough-and-tumble methods. By the 1920s and 1930s, many police departments developed new strategies that combined progressive initiatives with tougher law enforcement targeted specifically at growing minority populations. Cops and Kids illuminates conflicts between reformers and police over the practice of juvenile justice and sheds new light on the origins of lasting tensions between America's police and urban communities.




Police Officers Are Our Friends


Book Description

"Police Officers are here to help, they take an oath to protect and serve you... they protect kids like you, your family, friends, and everyone else in the community too!" The perfect book to teach and reinforce positive police/community relationships and show children that police officers are their friends, and there to help them when they need. Learn about how Police Officers do great and kind things each and every day for their communities, and that they are also more than just the job they do. Police Officers take an oath to serve and protect their community, and they will always be there to look out for you! Visit us at www.PoliceKidsBooks.com for more titles!




Police Officers


Book Description

A simple look at police officers and the many different kinds of work that they do to keep their communities safe.




Hooray for Police Officers!


Book Description

Audisee® eBooks with Audio combine professional narration and text highlighting for an engaging read aloud experience! Carefully leveled text and fresh, vibrant photos engage young readers in learning about how police officers serve their community. Age-appropriate critical thinking questions and a photo glossary help build nonfiction learning skills.