Community Policing

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Community Policing

Community Policing is a strategy that permits police to stay long term over extended

periods and build closer relations with community residents. This enables cops to connect more

with locals and reduce criminality rather than just dealing with it. A corporate theory that

encourages the methodical utilization and collaborations to address intense public safety

concerns such as burglary, civil unrest, and violence fear (Fielding & Nigel). In easy words,

community policing establishes direct collaboration between police departments and local

communities to combat crime. Communities may assist police officers to accomplish their

respective aims by being more active alongside them. Enhanced public perception of law

enforcement agencies plus confidence between communities and officers via community

policing. Moreover, it can provide detailed knowledge and understanding of the requirements of

people and their expectations of the police.

Unlike conventional police, community policing wants to minimize criminality in the

community instead of responding to it. It also ensures a safe friendly scene. Inhabitants are asked

to identify the crimes which mostly concern them, resulting in quite a realistic police department

ranking created by area citizens. It motivates citizens to work alongside police and maintain their

town safety (Skogen & Wesley).

Positive engagement, collaborations, and problem solutions are among the key parts of

community policing (Cordner & Gary).


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1. Police work always entails unfavorable encounters involving community members

such as imprisonment, suspicious searches, and incapacity to help victims.

Community policing acknowledges this and encourages police to engage in

constructive encounters wherever feasible.

2. Community policing strength of association partnerships between police,

government agencies, and communities to help assess and monitor issues.

Individuals should play an important part in community security than those in the

past few decades, and other public and private institutions could use existing assets

or power for support.

3. Community policing promotes an easy problem identification strategy to policing.

Naturally, emergency calls must be answered immediately, and cops should still

respond to particular events. Authorities must investigate those causes that lead to

both one and numerous instances. Investigators must endeavor the change these

factors to manage as well as prevent unnecessary events.


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4. Works Cited

Fielding, Nigel G. Community policing. University of Surrey, 1995.

Skogan, Wesley G. "Advocate: The promise of community policing." Police innovation:

Contrasting perspectives. Cambridge University Press, 2006. 27-43.

Cordner, Gary W. "Community policing: Elements and effects." Critical issues in policing:

Contemporary readings 5 (1997): 401-418.

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