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Contemporary policing is in crisis, a situation that has led to
persistent calls to reform it. Unfortunately, many proposed
solutions focus on piecemeal changes that ignore a fundamental
problem—policing relies on a largely reactive approach that does
not in any systematic or comprehensive way focus on crime
prevention. Most of what the police do, such as responding to 911
calls for service and employing directed patrols or hot spots
policing, fails to address the causes of crime. Compounding this
problem is the absence of any institution or agency charged with
prioritizing the prevention of crime and for ensuring that police
efforts support this goal. Kelly and Mears argue that a better
strategy exists, one that places responsibility on the police and
other governmental and non-governmental agencies and organizations
for truly preventing crime. Why, historically, did crime prevention
not take hold and infuse policing? One reason is a design
flaw—the vision of policing centered too much on surveillance and
too little on efforts that target the diverse causes of crime. The
end result? Contemporary policing lacks any institutionalized
commitment or systematic approach to crime prevention. It is
designed to fail. The Reinvention of Policing diagnoses this
problem, along with many others, in American policing. Then the
authors turn to solutions. First, they call for a great many
reforms to existing practices. Second, they call for a reinvention
of the design and focus of policing and, concomitantly, the way
that states, cities, and towns approach public safety. This change
presents special challenges, but it is the only way to create an
appreciable impact in reducing crime and improving justice.
Contemporary policing is in crisis, a situation that has led to
persistent calls to reform it. Unfortunately, many proposed
solutions focus on piecemeal changes that ignore a fundamental
problem—policing relies on a largely reactive approach that does
not in any systematic or comprehensive way focus on crime
prevention. Most of what the police do, such as responding to 911
calls for service and employing directed patrols or hot spots
policing, fails to address the causes of crime. Compounding this
problem is the absence of any institution or agency charged with
prioritizing the prevention of crime and for ensuring that police
efforts support this goal. Kelly and Mears argue that a better
strategy exists, one that places responsibility on the police and
other governmental and non-governmental agencies and organizations
for truly preventing crime. Why, historically, did crime prevention
not take hold and infuse policing? One reason is a design
flaw—the vision of policing centered too much on surveillance and
too little on efforts that target the diverse causes of crime. The
end result? Contemporary policing lacks any institutionalized
commitment or systematic approach to crime prevention. It is
designed to fail. The Reinvention of Policing diagnoses this
problem, along with many others, in American policing. Then the
authors turn to solutions. First, they call for a great many
reforms to existing practices. Second, they call for a reinvention
of the design and focus of policing and, concomitantly, the way
that states, cities, and towns approach public safety. This change
presents special challenges, but it is the only way to create an
appreciable impact in reducing crime and improving justice.
Implementation Science is the science of the effectiveness of
research for real-world practitioners. This book is an
indispensable, highly innovative, and evidence-based resource aimed
at utilizing research in psychology to improve all aspects of
education, from individual teaching programs to organizational
development. It addresses the widespread confusion and
disappointment about the lack of effectiveness of real-world
psychology and provides twenty-seven chapters offering proven
policies, strategies, and approaches for designing, supporting, and
improving interventions in schools. Collectively, the chapters go
beyond the realm of psychology and education, tackling concerns
about how to promote positive change in any context, covering
topics from epistemology through statistics to examples of
implementation approaches, frameworks and protocols. This book
creates an immensely relevant body of information and evidence for
any practitioner or organization facing the challenges of change.
Essential reading for practitioners, policy makers, stakeholders,
and funders in psychology, education, and beyond.
Implementation Science is the science of the effectiveness of
research for real-world practitioners. This book is an
indispensable, highly innovative, and evidence-based resource aimed
at utilizing research in psychology to improve all aspects of
education, from individual teaching programs to organizational
development. It addresses the widespread confusion and
disappointment about the lack of effectiveness of real-world
psychology and provides twenty-seven chapters offering proven
policies, strategies, and approaches for designing, supporting, and
improving interventions in schools. Collectively, the chapters go
beyond the realm of psychology and education, tackling concerns
about how to promote positive change in any context, covering
topics from epistemology through statistics to examples of
implementation approaches, frameworks and protocols. This book
creates an immensely relevant body of information and evidence for
any practitioner or organization facing the challenges of change.
Essential reading for practitioners, policy makers, stakeholders,
and funders in psychology, education, and beyond.
Queen Power is an expression of the true perspective through which
women should see themselves and how the world must see them. This
material exemplifies womanhood in the most simplistic and yet
profound manner. A woman who knows who she is and whose she is will
surely turn out to be a true life asset to God and to many
generations. Queen Power is every woman's book, in one hundred and
fifty special ways. Much more, a book for the men who love her.
Literary Nonfiction. Memoir. One day during his ninth-grade Speech
class Kelly Daniels's outlaw, soul-surfer father appears at school
unannounced and pulls the boy from class. Speeding down the
freeway, Daniels's father admits that he has been involved in a
crime, but he does not remember how it happened. He'd been up for
days on cocaine and booze, he explains, and the next thing he knew
he woke up in jail with a bad feeling. It was almost a relief when
the guard told him he'd killed his cousin Barkley, a drug kingpin
of sorts. "I'm sorry to lay this on you," he tells the stunned boy,
"but I'm not going to be around to watch your back. Barkley has a
son your age...and this kid might come after you someday. You're
going to have to learn to look after yourself." A few days later,
the father skips bail and flees the country. "Forget about him,"
everybody says. But the boy doesn't forget. Someday, he believes,
they'll find each other, the fugitive father and the dreamy son,
and together they'll surf perfect, faraway waves."Daniels more or
less raised himself, as the son of Christian cultists fallen on
hard times in the California desert in the 1970s.... H]e writes
about those years of poverty and lost wandering with a nuanced
objectivity that is wise as only very good writers can be wise: He
draws beauty out of humiliation and fear with the precision and
evocative power of his language and the relentlessness of his
gaze."--Jaimy Gordon"In his work] you'll encounter a writer of
dynamic prose, of expertly modulated sentences, and pitch perfect,
often hilarious dialogue; a writer with a haunting sense of
atmosphere, and considerable narrative invention."--Stuart Dybek
When we think of the Internet, we generally think of Amazon,
Google, Hotmail, Napster, MySpace, and other sites for buying
products, searching for information, downloading entertainment,
chatting with friends, or posting photographs. In the academic
literature about the Internet, however, these uses are rarely
covered. The Internet and American Business fills this gap, picking
up where most scholarly histories of the Internet leave off--with
the commercialization of the Internet established and its effect on
traditional business a fact of life. These essays, describing
challenges successfully met by some companies and failures to adapt
by others, are a first attempt to understand a dynamic and exciting
period of American business history. Tracing the impact of the
commercialized Internet since 1995 on American business and
society, the book describes new business models, new companies and
adjustments by established companies, the rise of e-commerce, and
community building; it considers dot-com busts and difficulties
encountered by traditional industries; and it discusses such newly
created problems as copyright violations associated with music
file-sharing and the proliferation of Internet pornography.
ContributorsAtsushi Akera, William Aspray, Randal A. Beam, Martin
Campbell-Kelly, Paul E. Ceruzzi, James W. Cortada, Wolfgang Coy,
Blaise Cronin, Nathan Ensmenger, Daniel D. Garcia-Swartz, Brent
Goldfarb, Shane Greenstein, Thomas Haigh, Ward Hanson, David
Kirsch, Christine Ogan, Jeffrey R. Yost William Aspray is Rudy
Professor of Informatics at Indiana University in Bloomington. He
is the editor (with J. McGrath Cohoon) of Women and Information
Technology: Research on Underrepresentation (MIT Press, 2006 Paul
E. Ceruzzi is Curator of the National Air and Space Museum,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC. He is the author of A
History of Modern Computing (second edition, MIT Press, 2003) and
Internet Alley: High Technology in Tysons Corner, 1945-2005 (MIT
Press, 2008)
This compact history traces the computer industry from its origins
in 1950s mainframes, through the establishment of standards
beginning in 1965 and the introduction of personal computing in the
1980s. It concludes with the Internet's explosive growth since
1995. Across these four periods, Martin Campbell-Kelly and Daniel
Garcia-Swartz describe the steady trend toward miniaturization and
explain its consequences for the bundles of interacting components
that make up a computer system. With miniaturization, the price of
computation fell and entry into the industry became less costly.
Companies supplying different components learned to cooperate even
as they competed with other businesses for market share.
Simultaneously with miniaturization-and equally consequential-the
core of the computer industry shifted from hardware to software and
services. Companies that failed to adapt to this trend were left
behind. Governments did not turn a blind eye to the activities of
entrepreneurs. The U.S. government was the major customer for
computers in the early years. Several European governments
subsidized private corporations, and Japan fostered R&D in
private firms while protecting its domestic market from foreign
competition. From Mainframes to Smartphones is international in
scope and broad in its purview of this revolutionary industry.
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