Full Description
This book provides broad exposure to a variety of policing reforms that have not received adequate attention. It includes information and examples from different countries regarding efforts to change aspects of policing that are problematic or involve changes in the way crimes are committed. Some of the efforts to improve the police are relatively recent (i.e., using social media) and some areas of policing that seem to require frequent attention (i.e., working with the public).
Contents
Section I: Police Officer Education
1. Benefits and Challenges of Academic Police Education
KATJA M. HALLENBERG
2. Indian Police Training Institutions, Universities, and Other Stakeholder Partnerships: Toward a Matrix Model for Better Policing
SONY KUNJAPPAN
3. Downsizing to a College-Educated Police Force
GREGORY E. WALSH
Section II: Policing and the Public
4. Correlates of Citizen Trust in the Ghanaian Police: A Regional Study
FRANCIS D. BOATENG
5. Staging "White Maleness" with Cops: A Diversity Training Case Analysis
DEBORAH S. DEMEESTER & DONALD R. LAMAGDELEINE
6. Reengineering the Delivery of Police Services: The Decision to Change Utilizing a Problem-Solving ModelRICHARD C. LUMB & JOHN B. ROGERS
7. Factors That Predict Citizen Support for Aggressive Policing
TIMOTHY A. LAVERY, AMIE M. SCHUCK, MEGAN A. ALDERDEN, RACHEL M. JOHNSTON, DENNIS P. ROSENBAUM, & CODY D. STEPHENS
8. Opposing Perspectives of Policing in Pakistan and Implications for ReformMARK SHAW
Section III: Past and Contemporary Changes in Policing
9. Assessing the Current Status of Women in Policing: The Presence of the PastVENESSA GARCIA
10. Police Downsizing and Change Processes in Northern Ireland: Retired Police Officers' Views on the Implementation of the Patten Report on Policing
PAUL KENNETH GILBERT, CHRISTOPHER ALAN LEWIS, & CONOR MC GUCKIN
11. Reflections on Police Corruption: Faltering Developments in Regulating Police Conduct in Australia
BERNADINE TUCKER & ANN-CLAIRE LARSEN
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