QPP 27: George Kelling and Broken Windows | Quality Policing Podcast

Professor Kelling takes the listener back in history to the time of the infancy of Broken Widows. It is difficult to imagine a time when Broken Windows wasn’t thought of as an important crime-fighting strategy. Listening to Kelling feels like being part of his story.

George Kelling, talks about how he got into policing, the importance of being on the street, and…
— Read on www.spreaker.com/user/qualitypolicing/qpp027-kelling

To Protect and Serve: New Trends in State-Level Policing Reform, 2015-2016 – IssueLab

The work of law enforcement involves countless and risky low-visibility duties. Over the last three years, however, members of the public have brought increased attention to incidents of police-community conflict, violence, and misconduct, sparked by several high-profile deaths of people of color, many of them unarmed, during seemingly routine police encounters. These incidents—many of which were captured unfiltered on video and widely disseminated—have resulted in scrutiny of police officer behavior and, in particular, have reignited a debate over the extent to which police may use deadly force against civilians. At the same time, killings of police officers in New York City, Dallas, and Baton Rouge increased concerns about officer safety. Concerned that eroding public trust impedes relationship-building with the community, 34 states and the District of Columbia enacted at least 79 bills, executive orders, or resolutions in 2015 and 2016 to change some aspect of policing policy or practice—a marked contrast to the relatively few laws related to policing that were passed by states between 2012 and 2014.

— Read on www.issuelab.org/resource/to-protect-and-serve-new-trends-in-state-level-policing-reform-2015-2016.html

Solutions: American Leaders Speak Out on Criminal Justice | Brennan Center for Justice

In this remarkable bipartisan collaboration, the country’s most prominent political figures and experts join together to propose ideas to reform our criminal justice system – and end mass incarceration.
— Read on www.brennancenter.org/publication/solutions-american-leaders-speak-out-criminal-justice