Full Description
Whether they want to or not, police are increasingly having to work with and through many local, national and international partnerships. This edited collection explores the development of policing and security networks. It looks at ways in which police can develop new strategies for integrating the knowledge, capacities and resources of different security providers and assesses the challenges associated with such a venture.
Contents
Acknowledgments; Notes on contributors; Acronyms; Introduction; New ways of doing business: Networks of policing and security Jenny Fleming and Jennifer Wood; Chapter 1 The sour laws of network governance R.A.W. Rhodes; Chapter 2 Mapping security networks: From metaphorical concept to empirical model Benoit Dupont; Chapter 3 Harnessing resources for networked policing Julie Ayling, Peter Grabosky and Clifford Shearing; Chapter 4 Working through networks: The challenge of partnership policing Jenny Fleming; Chapter 5 International networking and regional engagement: An AFP perspective Mick Keelty; Chapter 6 Intelligence-led policing: The AFP approach Grant Wardlaw and Jeninne Boughton; Chapter 7 Police unions as network participants Mark Burgess; Chapter 8 What works, what doesn't work and what looks promising in police research networks David Bradley, Christine Nixon and Monique Marks; Chapter 9 Peacemaking networks and restorative justice John Braithwaite; Chapter 10 The governance of policing and security provision Colleen Lewis and Jennifer Wood; Chapter 11 Dark networks, bright networks and the place of the police project Jennifer Wood; Index.



