Our study is a randomized trial in policing confirming that intensive training in procedural justice (PJ) can lead to more procedurally just behavior and less disrespectful treatment of people at high-crime places. The fact that the PJ intervention reduced arrests by police officers, positively influenced residents’ perceptions of police harassment and violence, and also reduced crime provides important guidance for police reform in a period of strong criticism of policing. This randomized trial points to the potential for PJ training not simply to encourage fair and respectful policing but also to improve evaluations of the police and crime prevention effectiveness
— Read on www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2118780119
Tag: Police Crime Fighting
Vital City | Gun Violence is THE Crime Problem
This article discusses the impact of crime and fear of crime and not all fear of crime is equal. Gun violence disproportionately impacts peoples lives compared to property crime.
Gun violence, and the fear of gun violence, distort the lives of millions of
Americans.
— Read on www.vitalcitynyc.org/articles/gun-violence-is-the-crime-problem
A NEW MODE OF PROTECTION REDESIGNING POLICING AND PUBLIC SAFETY FOR THE 21ST CENTURY THE FINAL REPORT OF THE STRATEGIC REVIEW OF POLICING IN ENGLAND AND WALES
New study of policing in England. The latest study since 1962. This is England’s answer to police reform.
www.policingreview.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/srpew_final_report.pdf
Seattle vows quicker charging decisions to deter petty crime
The move aims to help tackle persistent low-level crime that has plagued businesses downtown
— Read on www.police1.com/legal/articles/seattle-vows-quicker-charging-decisions-to-deter-petty-crime-ukH6pB6CImnIt9r9/
The Repeat Offenders of Criminal Stupidity › American Greatness
One way to understand the story of the last 75 years of American social life is by looking at the ebb and flow of serious crime. There was a golden age of low…
— Read on amgreatness.com/2022/01/23/the-repeat-offenders-of-criminal-stupidity/
Smash & Grab Retail
When police busted a shoplifting ring operating out of a liquor store last spring, they calculated that the dozen or so people involved had swiped at least $375,000 worth of goods from retailers such as Walmart, Lowe’s, and Walgreens. The pair heading the ring relied on small-time thieves, including several with drug arrest records, to launch brazen “grab-and-go” operations in which they snatched expensive goods and then raced out of stores and fled in cars with phony license plates. Though police and prosecutors often categorize shoplifting as a nonviolent crime, the gang’s sprees resulted in several physical confrontations, including one in which a gang member assaulted a store employee with a stun gun. This may sound similar to the organized smash-and-grab lootings that have plagued high-end retailers in San Francisco and other Northern California communities recently, but this gang was operating out of Daytona Beach, Florida—and had done so for nearly two years.
— Read on www.city-journal.org/smash-and-grab-retail
‘We’re Not Ready for Police-Free Zones’ | The Crime Report
This is an interesting discussion with Professor Moskos about crime and how New York City defeated crime in the 1990s. The Crime Report is a paid site where it allows 5 free articles a month. I recommend subscribing to it because it offers a lot of useful information about criminal justice issues.
Explanations for the rise in violent crime tend to avoid the role police play in crime prevention, argues policing expert Peter Moskos. In the latest installment of the “At the Crossroads” series of interviews sponsored by the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, Moskos tells Greg Berman that cops need to be proactive in addressing clear threats like gun offenders.
— Read on thecrimereport.org/2022/01/20/were-not-ready-for-police-free-zones/
New Evidence Connects Police Protests and Rising Violent Crime
Recent studies support the existence of the Ferguson Effect
— Read on www.city-journal.org/new-evidence-connects-police-protests-and-rising-violent-crime
Violent Crime Is Surging. But We Know What to Do About It | Time
Rising violence in many American cities needs to be faced with constructive, focused policy argues a new report
— Read on time.com/6138650/violent-crime-us-surging-what-to-do/
There are several useful links throughout the article that you may want to checkout.
Saving Lives: Ten Essential Actions Cities Can Take to Reduce Violence Now
A new report from the Council on Criminal Justice:
Amid a rise in homicide, diverse CCJ panel urges leaders to reject “us vs. them” politics and collaborate on ten essential steps to reduce violence now.
— Read on counciloncj.org/10-essential-actions/
On the website there is a link to the Full Report.