|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
This book tackles the contentious issue of policing in an age of
controversy and uncertainty. It is a timely book written by police
scholars - predominantly former practitioners from Europe,
Australia and North America - who draw from their own research and
operational experiences to illuminate key issues relating to police
reform in the present day. While acknowledging some relevance of
usual proposed models, such as problem-solving, evidence-based
policing and procedural justice, the contributors provide an
insider look at a variety of perspectives and approaches to police
reform which have emerged in recent decades. It invites university
students, criminologists, social scientists, police managers,
forensic scientists to question and adapt their perspectives on a
broad range of topics such as community policing, hate crime,
Islamic radicalisation, neighborhood dynamics, situational
policing, antidiscrimination and civil society, police ethics,
performance measures, and advances in forensic science, technology,
intelligence and more in an accessible and comprehensive manner.
The book outlines two separate processes for working with groups
and discusses their separate applications as well as how they work
together for a holistic approach to institutional transformation;
it emphasizes group level processes, including academic
departments, an area which currently lacks development. The text
integrates across a wide range of disciplines and interdisciplinary
fields, thus it brings institutional transformation concepts into
conversations across many boundaries highlighting how insights from
one field can address issues in another. The book is timely in
topic, focusing on solutions for institutional racism and sexism
and a pathway to collectively address calls for racial justice and
equity by blending theory and practice into a praxis for how to
implement and sustain socially just institutions; it includes
outcomes documenting the positive impacts of the practices
described in the text.
This book tackles the contentious issue of policing in an age of
controversy and uncertainty. It is a timely book written by police
scholars - predominantly former practitioners from Europe,
Australia and North America - who draw from their own research and
operational experiences to illuminate key issues relating to police
reform in the present day. While acknowledging some relevance of
usual proposed models, such as problem-solving, evidence-based
policing and procedural justice, the contributors provide an
insider look at a variety of perspectives and approaches to police
reform which have emerged in recent decades. It invites university
students, criminologists, social scientists, police managers,
forensic scientists to question and adapt their perspectives on a
broad range of topics such as community policing, hate crime,
Islamic radicalisation, neighborhood dynamics, situational
policing, antidiscrimination and civil society, police ethics,
performance measures, and advances in forensic science, technology,
intelligence and more in an accessible and comprehensive manner.
|
|