FREE SHIPPING BOTH WAYS
ON EVERY ORDER!
LIST PRICE:
$77.00

Sorry, this item is currently unavailable.

Community Oriented Policing : A Systemic Approach to Policing

ISBN: 9780130141101 | 0130141100
Edition: 2nd
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Pub. Date: 7/1/2000

Why Rent from Knetbooks?

Because Knetbooks knows college students. Our rental program is designed to save you time and money. Whether you need a textbook for a semester, quarter or even a summer session, we have an option for you. Simply select a rental period, enter your information and your book will be on its way!

Top 5 reasons to order all your textbooks from Knetbooks:

  • We have the lowest prices on thousands of popular textbooks
  • Free shipping both ways on ALL orders
  • Most orders ship within 48 hours
  • Need your book longer than expected? Extending your rental is simple
  • Our customer support team is always here to help
SummaryTable of Contents
For courses in Police Community Relations, Police and Society, Community-Oriented Policing, and Special Topics in Policing and/or Criminal Justice. This text first defines the concept of community-oriented policing, then guides students through a systemic approach to both its principles and practices. Providing a perfect balance of theory and applications, it considers various interpretations of the overall philosophy and approach to community-oriented policing.
Forewordix
Prefacexi
Acknowledgmentsxvii
The Evolution of Community-Oriented Policing
1(21)
... MOREThe Historical Roots of Policing
3(4)
Policing in the New Frontier
7(3)
Policing in a Young America
10(1)
Policing in the Twentieth Century
10(3)
Historical Approaches Related to Community Policing
13(4)
The Era of Community Policing
17(2)
The Evolution of Community-Oriented Policing
19(1)
References
20(2)
Community-Oriented Policing Defined
22(28)
The Absence of a Definition
25(3)
Community-Oriented Policing, Not Police-Community Relations
28(3)
Common Themes
31(11)
From Philosophy to Strategic Application
42(2)
Community Policing Defined
44(2)
References
46(4)
Strategic-Oriented Policing
50(28)
Targeting
55(5)
Directed Patrols
60(2)
Aggressive Patrols
62(6)
Saturation Patrols
68(3)
Assessment
71(4)
Conclusion
75(1)
References
76(2)
Neighborhood-Oriented Policing
78(30)
Initiating Neighborhood-Oriented Policing
82(6)
Neighborhood-Oriented Policing Programs
88(1)
Community Patrols
89(4)
Community Crime Prevention
93(6)
Communication Programs
99(1)
Community Social Control Programs
100(4)
Conclusion
104(1)
References
105(3)
Problem-Oriented Policing
108(27)
The Evolution
112(5)
Implementation
117(16)
Conclusion
133(1)
References
134(1)
Integration
135(3)
Who Initiates?
138(5)
The Three Components
143(8)
Case Studies
151(12)
New York City, New York
152(3)
Spokane, Washington
155(6)
Parkersburg, West Virginia
161(2)
Conclusion
163(1)
References
164
Organization and Management
106(95)
Values and Goals
171(4)
Organization through Decentralization
175(12)
management through Total Quality Management
187(9)
Conclusion
196(1)
References
196(5)
The Role of the Police
201(29)
The Traditional Role of the Police
202(5)
The Role of the Community-Oriented Police Officer
207(7)
Police Attitudes toward Community-Oriented Policing
214(4)
Developing Community-Oriented Police Officers
218(8)
Conclusion
226(1)
References
227(3)
The Role of the Community
230(30)
Community Defined
235(4)
The Traditional Role of the Community
239(1)
The Role of Community in Community-Oriented Policing
240(5)
Community Involvement
245(10)
Conclusion
255(1)
References
256(4)
The Role of the Chief
260(28)
The Traditional Role of the Police Chief
265(3)
The Community-Oriented Policing Role of the Police Chief
268(5)
Ten Principle for Police Chief
273(12)
Conclusion
285(1)
References
286(2)
Implementing Community-Oriented Policing
288(36)
Incrementalism
296(1)
Stages
296(23)
Stages I
297(6)
Stage II
303(4)
Stage III
307(4)
Stage IV
311(2)
Stage V
313(6)
Communication and Training
319(1)
Conclusion
320(1)
References
321(3)
Evaluation
324(37)
Evaluation of Traditional Policing
329(1)
Transitional Evaluations
330(4)
Evaluation Criteria
334(9)
Evaluation Research
343(4)
Methods
347(9)
Surverys
349(3)
Case Studies
352(1)
Various Methods
353(3)
Conclusion
356(1)
References
357(4)
The Federal Role in Community-Oriented Policing
361(37)
From Demonstration Projects to the COPS Office
362(7)
COP Grants
369(15)
Assessing Cops
384(12)
Conclusion
396(1)
References
396(2)
Comparative Community-Oriented Policing
398(33)
Comparative Community-Oriented Policing
399(3)
Community-Oriented Policing: Canadian Style
402(6)
Community-Oriented Policing: British Style
408(8)
Community-Oriented Policing: Japanese Style
416(2)
Other Approaches of Comparative Community-Oriented Polcing
418(8)
Singapore
419(1)
Israel
420(1)
Australia
420(1)
New Zealand
421(1)
South Africa
422(3)
Other Prospects
425(1)
Conclusion
426(1)
References
427(4)
Caveats
431(32)
Implementation Caveats
436(10)
Ancillary Caveats
446(11)
Conclusion
457(1)
References
458(5)
The Future
463(26)
Future Research
465(5)
Future Problems
470(2)
Future Benefits
472(6)
The Future
478(7)
Conclusion
485(1)
References
486(3)
Bibliography489(26)
Index515

Related Products


  • Community-Oriented Policing: A Systematic Approach to Policing
    Community-Oriented Policing: A...
  • Community-Oriented Policing : A Systemic Approach to Policing
    Community-Oriented Policing : ...
  • Community-Oriented Policing : A Systemic Approach to Policing
    Community-Oriented Policing : ...


Please wait while this item is added to your cart...