Contradictions Between Community-Oriented Police Training and Paramilitary Police Training: Implications for Police Recruit Mental Health Response Training

被引:0
|
作者
Matthew M. Morgan
机构
[1] Queensland University of Technology,School of Justice
关键词
Policing; Police training; Procedural Justice; Mental Illness;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The increasingly professionalised role of the police requires police organisations to transition away from paramilitary policing models and embrace community-oriented policing practices. One important aspect of the community-oriented policing model is the development of effective communication skills for when police interact with vulnerable persons such as persons with mental illness (PWMI) in crisis. Given the development of community-oriented police skills begins at the academy, the form and content of academy mental health response training (MHRT) as well as the training methods facilitators use to impart the MHRT, is important. Yet police officers are often criticised for not receiving adequate MHRT, especially when police respond to PWMI in crisis using tactics that are considered procedurally unfair and unjust. Applying procedural justice as a lens, this research explores the MHRT of one Australian state police academy to determine the effectiveness of the MHRT in preparing recruits for utilising procedurally just tactics for future interactions with PWMI in crisis. By conducting nonparticipant observation with police recruits, this research determines that recruits receive cursory MHRT at the academy that is lacking in content, duration, and pedagogical innovation. It is argued that the lack of MHRT is further compounded by the abundance of paramilitary training practices and culture at the academy, which further undermines the appropriate development of community-oriented and procedurally just police officers.
引用
收藏
页码:876 / 891
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] POLICE TRAINING ON PROBATION
    WATSON, P
    NEW SOCIETY, 1970, 16 (425): : 910 - 911
  • [32] Method of Police Training
    Londono Portela, Gonzalo Ricardo
    Patino Alvarez, Jorge Enrique
    Rodriguez Zamora, Diego Stetid
    Gil Rojas, Bernardo Rafael
    LOGOS CIENCIA & TECNOLOGIA, 2018, 10 (04): : 212 - 222
  • [33] POLICE TRAINING IN DACTYLOLOGY
    SLUSAR, P
    POLICE CHIEF, 1979, 46 (08): : 60 - 61
  • [34] The impact of police training in mental health: an example from Australia
    Herrington, Victoria
    Pope, Rodney
    POLICING & SOCIETY, 2014, 24 (05): : 501 - 522
  • [35] POLICE TRAINING MOBILITY .2. EVALUATING THE CONCEPT OF MOBILE POLICE TRAINING
    DRAWBAUGH, CC
    POLICE CHIEF, 1968, 35 (08): : 56 - &
  • [36] USE OF DIAGNOSTIC SMALL GROUPS IN POLICE RECRUIT SELECTION AND TRAINING
    MILLS, RB
    JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL LAW CRIMINOLOGY AND POLICE STUDIES, 1969, 60 (02): : 238 - 241
  • [37] Police Recruit Training Programmes: A Systematic Map of Research Literature
    McGinley, Brendan
    Agnew-Pauley, Winifred
    Tompson, Lisa
    Belur, Jyoti
    POLICING-A JOURNAL OF POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2020, 14 (01) : 52 - 75
  • [38] POLICE ATTITUDES TOWARDS COMMUNITY RELATIONS TRAINING
    SILVERMAN, H
    POLICE CHIEF, 1968, 35 (06): : 57 - 59
  • [39] TRAINING POLICE IN COMMUNITY RELATIONS AND URBAN PROBLEMS
    TALBOTT, JA
    TALBOTT, SW
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 1971, 127 (07): : 894 - &
  • [40] MANUAL OF COMMUNITY POLICE TRAINING OF EL SALVADOR
    Recinos Montes, Julio Alexander
    POLICIA Y SEGURIDAD PUBLICA, 2011, 1 (01): : 327 - 331