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ویرایش:
نویسندگان: John Eterno
سری:
ISBN (شابک) : 9781466575936, 9781466575844
ناشر: CRC Press
سال نشر: 2014
تعداد صفحات: 228
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 10 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب The New York City Police Department: The Impact of Its Policies and Practices به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب اداره پلیس شهر نیویورک: تأثیر سیاست ها و عملکردهای آن نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
''1 مقدمه جان A. Eterno پلیسمحور مبتنی بر شواهد اصطلاحی است که برای توسعه و بهبود خطمشی مبتنی بر مطالعه علمی استفاده میشود: آنچه کار میکند. آینده نگری است. این یک مهر لاستیکی برای برنامه های موجود نیست. مطالعهای بر اساس روشهای علمی معتبر انجام میشود و سپس خطمشی تدوین، آزمایش یا بر اساس نتایج اصلاح میشود. این امر مستلزم یک بخش روشن فکر و شفاف است که مایل است داده ها را در اختیار یک تیم تحقیقاتی مستقل و بیرونی قرار دهد. نمونههای خوب این موضوع عبارتند از: مطالعه تیلور و همکاران در مورد قربانیان جنایات جنسی در ویکتوریا، استرالیا (به تیلور و همکاران، 2012 مراجعه کنید) یا کارهای مختلف انگل با پلیس سینسیناتی، ایالات متحده (به عنوان مثال، تامپسون، 2009 را ببینید. یا انگل
''1 Introduction John A. Eterno Evidence-based policing is a term used for developing and improving policy based on scientific study: what works. It is forward thinking. It is not a rubber stamp for existing programs. A study based on sound scientific methods is conducted and then policy is developed, tested, or reformed based on the results. This requires an open-minded, transparent department willing to allow data to be given to an outside, independent research team. Good examples of this include: Taylor et al.'s study of sex crime victims in Victoria, Australia (see Taylor et al., 2012) or Engel's various works with the police of Cincinnati, United States (see, e.g., Thompson, 2009 or Engel & Whalen, 2010). Conversely, the New York City Police Department engages in what has been described as policy-based evidence making. It is a pejorative term meaning they work back from a policy that has been in place for years and try to find evidence for it. One strategy is to invite those likely to be friendly to them from outside (e.g., Smith & Purtell, 2006; RAND Corporation, 2009) who work closely with the department, sometimes in a give-and- take manner, in a likeminded pursuit, ultimately to justify at least some of the necessary evidence to defend the status quo. Indeed, such researchers can be hired by friends of the police department or even the police department itself (no independent funding sources such as federal or private grants or other government sources) making independent findings unlikely (e.g., see the Statement by the New York City Bar Association (2009) exposing numerous concerns with the RAND report and Floyd v. City of New York case excerpts on the Center for Constitutional Rights website specifically showing how the police''-- Read more...
Content: Introduction; John A. Eterno Unreasonable Suspicion: Youth and Policing in New York City; Christine S. Barrow and Delores Jones-Brown An Examination of the Constitutional Issues Related to New York City Police Department Policing Tactics and Policies; Christopher Sullivan J.D. and Kerry Ulmer Evaluating How the NYPD Handles Crime Victims: Judgments Based on Statistical Performance Measures; Andrew Karmen The New Corruption: Overwhelming Evidence of NYPD's Crime Report Manipulation; John A. Eterno and Eli B. Silverman Marijuana Madness: The Scandal of New York City's Racist Marijuana Possession Arrests; Harry G. Levine and Loren Siegel The Rise of Command and Control Protest Policing in New York; Alex S. Vitale Impact of Technology on Crime Strategies: Case Study of the New York Police Department; Joseph E. Pascarella A Grassroots Movement to Change the NYPD; Robert Gangi Index
Abstract: ''Studying the flagship New York City Police Department is critical to understanding policing and democratic society. An examination of the department by experts who have been watching it for years, this book reviews qualitative research on how the community views the NYPD, police culture, resistance to change, and the drop in the homicide rate in recent years. It explores hiring, firing and retention, discusses crime-fighting strategies, and reviews legal concerns and the response to public demonstrations such as the Occupy Wall Street movement. The final chapter demonstrates how the lessons relate to other departments throughout the world''--''1 Introduction John A. Eterno Evidence-based policing is a term used for developing and improving policy based on scientific study: what works. It is forward thinking. It is not a rubber stamp for existing programs. A study based on sound scientific methods is conducted and then policy is developed, tested, or reformed based on the results. This requires an open-minded, transparent department willing to allow data to be given to an outside, independent research team. Good examples of this include: Taylor et al.'s study of sex crime victims in Victoria, Australia (see Taylor et al., 2012) or Engel's various works with the police of Cincinnati, United States (see, e.g., Thompson, 2009 or Engel & Whalen, 2010). Conversely, the New York City Police Department engages in what has been described as policy-based evidence making. It is a pejorative term meaning they work back from a policy that has been in place for years and try to find evidence for it. One strategy is to invite those likely to be friendly to them from outside (e.g., Smith & Purtell, 2006; RAND Corporation, 2009) who work closely with the department, sometimes in a give-and- take manner, in a likeminded pursuit, ultimately to justify at least some of the necessary evidence to defend the status quo. Indeed, such researchers can be hired by friends of the police department or even the police department itself (no independent funding sources such as federal or private grants or other government sources) making independent findings unlikely (e.g., see the Statement by the New York City Bar Association (2009) exposing numerous concerns with the RAND report and Floyd v. City of New York case excerpts on the Center for Constitutional Rights website specifically showing how the police''