Sunday, December 1, 2019

My paper on community policing






Research Paper
Mark Jarnagan
Northern Arizona University
















Abstract
This paper studies community policing, and its effects on different communities around the world. First is the history of community policing in America, then the countries of Britain, Japan and Nicaragua will be addressed in their usage of community policing. The affects will be discussed, and while there has been some areas where community policing where it did not meet expectations it is the stance of this paper that community policing models and strategies are overall effective when it comes to lowering crime and restoring legitimacy to the police.
















Community Policing
I Introduction

            Community Policing is gaining popularity across the globe as more police departments, stations, precincts, and city governments are realizing the benefits to community policing. One of the initial goals in community policing has been to legitimize and restore the publics trust in the police. It has also been instrumental in lowering crimes in the communities were these programs exist. “Police agencies must help build stronger, more self-sufficient communities—communities in which crime and disorder will not thrive” (BJA 1994) community policing is about bringing the community together in an effort to deter and keep crime at bay. Not all programs are equal and across the world community policing has been instituted for a number of different reasons; like stopping home grown terror attacks, or to help with rising numbers of homicides, or to help with protecting neighborhoods, but they all have had similar effects regarding crime and restoring trust in the police.  Community based policing is an effective strategy or set of strategies that combined lower crime and help legitimize the police to the communities they are in.

II History of community policing

            During the 50’s and 60’s there was a lot of civil unrest with war protests, the hippy movement and the Civil Rights movement- there were many clashes between the people and the police. Crank (1994) suggests that the police were committing some of the crime that they were supposed to be trying to stop.  Reform in the system was needed and the idea of Community policing was eventually formed. The idea was that by implementing these programs it would help make the police look like an organization that was actually fighting crime (Crank 1994). However, many of the programs at first were not successful or not implemented in way to address the problems facing the communities and the police. (McKee & Lewis 2016). McKee and Lewis go on to state how the Community Policing as touted by Presidents and Politicians was a “distraction from the real problem” (McKee & Lewis 2016) and that is Accountability for the actions of the police. President Obama made an executive order to look into these problems and find solutions or strategies to help the issues of accountability, police brutality, and crime in general (McKee & Lewis 2016). President Obama’s executive order lead to the creation of the Task Force on 21st Century Policing “The task force was created to strengthen community policing and trust among law enforcement officers and the communities they serve (Ramsey & Robinson 2015).  They came up with a number of different plans and strategies which they compiled into 6 different pillars that are recommendations for police departments to follow. Each pillar has a series of recommendations for police to implement, for example pillar three is the on the use of technology and social media, what follows is a list of recommendations on how to acquire new technology and how to effectively and ethically use social media in the community.

III Community Policing Programs

            Police departments across the globe have started using the community policing model all in an effort to lower the crime rate and to legitimize the police. Although the reasons for which such programs are started are different, the end results are the same. Cooke-Scott says about the Halton, Ontario police that the public is pushing for and demanding more police accountability (1998). In Japan 2003 the “Ministerial Conference on Measures against Crimes, which comprises all cabinet members and is led by the Prime Minister” (Hiro 2018) met to discuss the growing crime problem there the citizens volunteer to help patrol their communities and keep an eye on others As such in 2012 there were less then half the number of crimes reported in 2002- there were over 2.85 million crimes reported that year (Hiro 2018). After the attacks on the London underground, Britain started community policing in an effort to watch out for and stop radicalized terrorists (Klausen 2009). Nicaragua has adopted a community policing model long before its neighbors, believing that the police can work “from the community, for the community and with the community” (McNeish et al., 2018). As one can see, programs these started because of and for very different things, but in most cases the communities have seen a large decline in the overall crime rate. And as Crank noted, community policing is a result of the reform that was needed to address the problem of legitimacy of the police (1994).

IV In the Current Environment, Community Policing Is an Effective Policing Strategy

            Although there is a focus on police brutality, Community-Based policing has had a positive effect on policing and police abuse is rare. The media tends to cherry-pick and choose the worst cases to make a problem seem worse than it is. For example, according to the FBI’s Unified Crime Report (UCR) violent crime has been steadily decreasing. In 2000 there were approximately 1,425,486 cases of reported violent crimes while in 2018 there were 1,206,836 reported crimes, that is a drop of about 8% (FBI 2018). But the mass media would have people believe that violent crimes are worse, and that everyday life can be cut short due to the rampage of criminals. In recent years there has been a lot of media coverage over the “police brutality” against people of color. There have been a few instances where the action of the police was questionable, and at times thought provoking and emotionally scaring. But those instances are not the normal,   they are the few cherry picked incidents that get national attention McFarland, Taylor, and McFarland note how these instances gave rise to groups like Black Lives Matter (BLM) and the “slayings” of people of color by the police show how historically police have always infringed on black people’s lives. Statistically speaking though, it is debatable about the validity of the BLM’s claims. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics 4,813 people were counted as an arrest related death, with 42% of persons being white, 32% were black, and 20% were Hispanic (Burch A. M., 2011). And although these numbers do contradict the BLM’s claims, it is worth noting that the Arrest Related Death survey was found to have incomplete data and the survey was suspended in march of 2014 (BJS n.d.).
            While the Counter Terrorism approach of community policing in Britain has not produced the intended results (Klausen 2009), Japan has had great success with their community policing model. The Japanese homicide and theft rates are lower than France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States (Hiro 2018). The Nicaraguan model of community policing predates its neighboring countries and its model focuses on state-community relations. This model guides not only the individual officers, but the entire national police force and as such they have effectively “escaped the wave of crime and insecurity suffered by its neighbors” (McNeisch et al., 2018).  As noted earlier, the UCR states that violent crimes have decreased in recent years in the United States, that could most likely be due to the goals of community policing. Williams et al. explain that social media strategies used by police departments are particularly effective during crises (2018). Beshears notes that the usage of social media affects its effectiveness, the more frequency of its use equates to more communication with the public (2016) in other words, the more police departments use social media, the more they can communicate with the public and help with their needs.

V Conclusion

            Community policing is the effort to not only help restore legitimacy in the police, but also to help lower crime rates. While some communities had trouble Starting their programs most have seen success. Police are being seen and treated as respected authority figures and are helping community’s lower crime. In the case of Britain, while their counter-terrorism approach to community policing has not had the success they hoped for, it has had some positive effects on the terrorism problem so it has had some success just not a lot (Klausen 2009). Nicaragua has managed to not see the same rising crime rates its neighbors have (McNeisch et al., 2018), And Japan has had one of the best results of community policing and saw its number of violent crimes be cut in half over more than a decade. (Hiro 2018). By comparison the United states has not had the same success, but it has seen some with the national violent crime rate dropping roughly 8% in the same period (FBI 2018).
            As for the effects of police brutality against people of color, there needs to be more complete data and more research. What was found is that of the reported incidents, the arrest related deaths are statistically more White than not, but the minority population is much smaller than the white majority and as such absolute percentages of various crimes and deaths are misleading. Even though that is the case, the facts are that community policing is effective. These programs help drastically lower crime ad allow the police to build relationships with the communities they are sworn to protect and serve. And although some communities are not the resounding success others are, they still have an overall effect on the crime rate and help to restore legitimacy to the police. As the police are helping build relationships with community member (face to face or virtually) the people can see what the police do and learn how they protect communities. Cooke-Scott and McNeisch et al., both have stated in their own way that Communities are the Police, and Police are the Communities- meaning that the people watch and protect each other and help the police.

















References

McFarland M.J., Taylor J., McFarland C. A. S., Friedman K. L., (2018) Perceived Unfair      Treatment by Police, Race, and Telomere Length: A Nashville Community-based Sample of Black and White Men, Journal of Health and Social Behavior, (Vol 59, issue 4) https://journals-sagepub-com.libproxy.nau.edu/doi/full/10.1177/0022146518811144 585-600

Hino, K (2018) Plus Bouhan: A new community-based approach to crime prevention in Japan, International Journal of Law, Crime, and Justice (Vol. 54)  https://www-sciencedirect-com.libproxy.nau.edu/search/advanced?docId=10.1016%2Fj.ijlcj.2018.03.008 79-88

Cooke-Scot L. A., (1998) Community-based policing in Ontario: lessons from the Halton Regional Police Service, Canadian Public Administration (Vol.41(1)) https://onlinelibrary-wiley-com.libproxy.nau.edu/doi/epdf/10.1111/j.1754-7121.1998.tb01530.x  120-146

McNiesch, JA., Prado, S.M., Ehrlich H. F., (2019) Community-Based Policing in Nicaragua: Do the Claims of Communitarian, Proactive and Preventative Hold True? Journal of Human Security (Vol 15, issue 2) http://www.librelloph.com/journalofhumansecurity/article/view/364 7-20

Crank J. P., (1994) Watchman and Community: Myth and Institutionalization in Policing Law & Society Review  (Vol. 28, No. 2 ) https://www-jstor-org.libproxy.nau.edu/stable/3054149?sid=primo&origin=crossref&seq=2#metadata_info_tab_contents 325-352

McKee, A. J., Lewis A. L.,(2016) The New Community Policing: Developing a Partnership-Based Theoretical Foundation Interdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies (Vol 3 Issue 3) https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/ijps/article/view/141/135

Williams, C. B., Fedorowicz J., Kavanaugh, A., Mentzer, K., Thatcher, J. B., Xu, J., (2018) Leveraging social media to achieve a community policing agenda Government Information Quarterly (Vol 35 Issue 2) P210-222 https://www-sciencedirect-com.libproxy.nau.edu/science/article/pii/S0740624X16301897

BJA (1994) Understanding Community Policing A Framework for Action US: Department of Justice https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles/commp.pdf

Klausen J., (2009) British Counter-Terrorism After 7/7: Adapting Community Policing to the Fight Against Domestic Terrorism Journal of Ethnic & Migration Studies (Vol. 35 Issue 3) p403-420. http://web.b.ebscohost.com.libproxy.nau.edu/ehost/detail/detail?vid=0&sid=6d1dc0a3-f1f5-4676-aac6-bccff48b133e%40pdc-v-sessmgr03&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZSZzY29wZT1zaXRl#AN=36518224&db=sih

Ramsey, C.H., Robinson, L.O., (2015) The Presidents Task Force on 21st Century Policing [PDF] retrieved from https://cops.usdoj.gov/pdf/taskforce/taskforce_finalreport.pdf


BJS (n.d.) Arrest-Related Deaths Bureau of Justice Studies https://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=tp&tid=82

Burch A. M., (2011) Arrest-Related Deaths, 2003-2009 - Statistical Tables Bureau of Justice Statistics   https://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=2228

Beshears M. A., (2017) Effectiveness of Police Social Media Use American Journal of Criminal Justice (Volume 42, Issue 3) pp 489–501https://link-springer-com.libproxy.nau.edu/article/10.1007/s12103-016-9380-4