false
Legalistic policing refers to a strict adherence to enforcing laws without considering the spirit of the law or the community's needs. An example of this could be issuing tickets for minor infractions in low-income neighborhoods without addressing underlying issues. This approach can lead to a lack of trust between law enforcement and the community.
the Rodney King incident that started the LA riots
Reactive policing is where police officers would sit in their station and wait for the call from a member of the public summoning them to the scene of a crime. They would proceed to investigate and try to 'solve' the incident. It is considered a better practice to do proactive policing. This is actually being out on the beat, looking for issues, getting to know the community, and preventing the incident from occurring in the first place.
Due to the increasing crime figures, the US Justice Department conducted a series of studies to analyse what crime prevention worked, to put to test some of the held theories by academics. There has be an number of test done in the US one of the first was the Minneapolis Hot Spot Experiment concluded in 1985 by Sherman, L & Weisburd, D. With empirical data to support the theories many police department undertaken there own studies or used data from other studies and implemented some of the modern police strategies we see used today. Hots spot policing, POP (problem orientated policing, Community policing. Which these three strategies overlap to make an effective solution for crime and disorder control.
influenced the policing by local control
policing system
Problem Oriented Policing is REACTIVE - whereas Community Oriented Policing is PROACTIVE.
policing system
policing in Tagalog: pinupulis
Political Era (1840-1930), Reform Era(1930-1970), Community Oriented Policing Era (1970- Current)
General mandate for policing