On disorder, and why it matters
— Read on thecausalfallacy.com/p/its-time-to-talk-about-americas-disorder
Month: September 2024
The Perception of Crime Since 2020: The Case of Chattanooga | Manhattan Institute
Executive Summary
Crime remains a pressing concern for Americans, even as rates of violence have receded from 2022 peaks. What explains these persistent concerns? This report investigates this question in the context of a small but rapidly growing American city: Chattanooga, Tennessee. A Manhattan Institute poll from earlier this year found that Chattanooga residents are worried about safety in their communities; this report investigates why.In a review of Chattanooga data, it finds that the city experienced the same increases in certain kinds of crime that other American cities did over the past four years, but that, through the application of evidence-based practices, the city’s police and municipal government have brought the problem under control.
But even as violent crime has largely receded, there are multiple indicators suggesting that another problem persists: disorder. Data indicate that homelessness, trash, and certain kinds of petty crime remain elevated above pre-2020 levels. A reduction in city resources—especially police resources—appears to have caused a concentration on serious crime, at the expense of more minor but still significant issues.
Disorder, this report argues, matters, especially for a growing city like Chattanooga. Consequently, this report concludes by outlining a number of principles for addressing this problem, while capitalizing on the gains that the city has already made in getting major crime under control.
— Read on manhattan.institute/article/the-perception-of-crime-since-2020-the-case-of-chattanooga
Police used to stop crime — no more. It’s time to go back to basics
To rescue British policing, we must return to Sir Robert Peel’s vision of deterring disorder with visible beat bobbies — and create a separate detective force
— Read on www.thetimes.com/comment/columnists/article/police-stop-crime-back-to-basics-vnf9pt7ww
INVESTIGATION AND FINDINGS INTO THE ALLEGATIONS OF INEQUITY IN RECRUITMENT, HIRING, RETENTION, AND PROMOTIONAL POLICIES AND PRACTICES OF THE NEW JERSEY STATE POLICE
MPD Needs Improved Data Analysis, Targeted Deployment, and More Detectives
Get the report here:
dcauditor.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/MPD.Staffing.Report.9.12.24.pdf
Reimagining Public Safety in Chicago
Model Legislation to Modernize Anti-KKK Masking Laws for Intimidating Protesters | Manhattan Institute
Just as Ku Klux Klan members used white hoods to conceal their identities and terrorize their targets, modern activists are using keffiyehs, Guy Fawkes masks, balaclavas, and other inherently intimidating face coverings. Indeed, face-masking is pervasive among participants in demonstrations that are growing in frequency and disruptiveness. Most recently, the pro-Hamas “protests” that have proliferated […]
— Read on manhattan.institute/article/model-legislation-to-modernize-anti-kkk-masking-laws-for-intimidating-protesters
Investigation of the Lexington Police Department and the City of Lexington, Mississippi
See the report here:
REPORT TO THE COURT ON POLICE MISCONDUCT AND DISCIPLINE
See the report here:
www.nypdmonitor.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Discipline-Report.pdf
Autonomous, Not Untouchable: New Report Urges Canada to Rethink Police Accountability | Frontier Centre For Public Policy
Winnipeg, September 2024 – A new report from the Frontier Centre for Public Policy titled “They Must Not Become the Law Unto Themselves: Bringing Made-in-Canada Democratic Accountability to Autonomous Policing” argues that police independence in Canada is misunderstood, and this confusion is eroding public trust and creating dangerous policing inconsistencies.
The report, authored by Joseph Quesnel, Senior Research Fellow with the Frontier Centre, takes a hard look at the doctrine of police independence and its evolution, asserting that police should not be viewed as completely independent entities but as autonomous institutions accountable to elected officials and, ultimately, the Canadian public.
— Read on fcpp.org/2024/09/25/autonomous-not-untouchable-new-report-urges-canada-to-rethink-police-accountability/