Crime and Policing in Rural and Small-Town America


Book Description

While most researchers see the urban setting as being the only laboratory for studying crime problems throughout the United States, Crime and Policing in Rural and Small-Town America directly challenges this notion with an authoritative look at crime and the criminal justice system in rural America today. The assumption that rural crime is rare and comparable across various communities has led to incompatible theories and irrelevant practices. In order to transform this misconstruction, the Third Edition offers a clear outline of the definition of rural and provides a vital argument for why rural and small-town crime should be studied more than it is. The book also explores the individual nature of issues that emerge in these communities, including illegal drug production, domestic violence, agricultural crimes, rural poverty, and gangs, in addition to the training needs of rural police, probation in rural areas, and rural jails and prisons. Responding to rural crime requires an awareness of its context and how justice is carried out, as well as an appreciation of how features vary across rural areas. Understanding the relationships among crime, geography, and culture in the rural setting can reveal useful ideas and implications for crime and justice in communities across the United States.







Community Policing in a Rural Setting


Book Description

The authors provide stepping stones for rural and small-town agencies to make the organizational changes needed for community policing to take hold. The book introduces the concept of community policing and its many benefits to the agencies and communities that adopt it. Important issues discussed include the challenge of organizational change, as well as examples of community policing obstacles and successes, and the future of community policing in the 21st century.







Small Town Cops


Book Description

Small Town Cops is a detailed and insightful participant observant analysis of a rural community police department. This research combines observations of street action and interviews with police officers, jailers, dispatchers and inmates to present a candid overview of the problems that afflict the lives of officers working in a small town. Small Town Cops provides readers with and exploration into the world of policing by focusing on issues relating to comradeship, racism, sexism, interpersonal communication and the "blue shield of silence." The research debunks the belief that small town cops are backward, uneducated, and without professional ethics. Moreover, it exposes readers to the complexities faced by small town officers, when compared to their urban counterparts. Small Town Cops provides a first-hand look at the tactics employed by officers in an effort to overcome the complexities associated with small town life. The data also exposes the strategies employed by officers to find balance between their personal, professional, and community expectations and goals. This study is of value to anyone interested in sociology, criminal justice, policing and ethnographic research.




On the Beat


Book Description







Law Enforcement in Small Cities


Book Description

This report examines the present provision of law enforcement services in small, nonmetropolitan cities (cities of less than 25,000 population that are not suburbs of larger cities). The provision of police services is discussed in the light of standards developed by the national advisory commission on criminal justice standards and goals and by the American Bar Association. The author cites examples of practices currently in use by small cities around the nation in the following areas: personnel requirements; combining police and fire departments into a public safety departments; staffing requirements (including the use of police reserve units); police administration; training; the definition of basic services; decisions regarding the provision of non-police services; police community relations; and, regionalization.







Policing Immigrants


Book Description

The United States deported nearly two million illegal immigrants during the first five years of the Obama presidency—more than during any previous administration. President Obama stands accused by activists of being “deporter in chief.” Yet despite efforts to rebuild what many see as a broken system, the president has not yet been able to convince Congress to pass new immigration legislation, and his record remains rooted in a political landscape that was created long before his election. Deportation numbers have actually been on the rise since 1996, when two federal statutes sought to delegate a portion of the responsibilities for immigration enforcement to local authorities. Policing Immigrants traces the transition of immigration enforcement from a traditionally federal power exercised primarily near the US borders to a patchwork system of local policing that extends throughout the country’s interior. Since federal authorities set local law enforcement to the task of bringing suspected illegal immigrants to the federal government’s attention, local responses have varied. While some localities have resisted the work, others have aggressively sought out unauthorized immigrants, often seeking to further their own objectives by putting their own stamp on immigration policing. Tellingly, how a community responds can best be predicted not by conditions like crime rates or the state of the local economy but rather by the level of conservatism among local voters. What has resulted, the authors argue, is a system that is neither just nor effective—one that threatens the core crime-fighting mission of policing by promoting racial profiling, creating fear in immigrant communities, and undermining the critical community-based function of local policing.