UNDERWRITING THE RISKY INVESTMENT IN COMMUNITY POLICING - WHAT SOCIAL-SCIENCE SHOULD BE DOING TO EVALUATE COMMUNITY POLICING

被引:14
|
作者
KENNEDY, DM
MOORE, MH
机构
[1] John F. Kennedy School of Government, Havard University
关键词
D O I
10.1080/23277556.1995.10871210
中图分类号
D9 [法律]; DF [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
America appears to have committed itself to a profound shift in its core policing strategy, from ''reform policing'' to ''commmunity policing.'' This shift has been propelled by a powerful historical critique of the reform strategy; by an operational movement in police departments; and by political forces. Still unanswered is the question of whether community policing ''works''; that is, is a more valuable organizational strategy than the reform strategy. Social science and evaluation research are turning to this question. Implicit in the approach of community policing is a belief that the values of social science should guide social decision making; that this is a specialized task for trained outside evaluators; that ''crime'' is the most critical performance dimension; and that programs rather than organizations are the proper units of analysis. The authors argue that this framework may hinder the full development of community-policing departments as ''learning organizations''; that dimensions other than crime are also important in recognizing the value that police departments contribute to cities; and that the successful evaluation of the community-policing movement requires attention to organizations as well as programs. They suggest a modified social science research agenda.
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页码:271 / 289
页数:19
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