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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. The undercurrent of discontent between public police and the private sector has long been apparent where the issue of security is concerned. Understaffed and overburdened, law enforcement officers are hard pressed to adequately patrol every inch of a given community; frustrated and vulnerable, residents continue to clamor for better neighborhood protection against criminal activity. Since necessity is truly the mother of invention, the idea of community policing has emerged as a viable alternative to an otherwise impassable problem. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCPubPolic.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
hard pressed to adequately patrol every inch of a given community; frustrated and vulnerable, residents continue to clamor for better neighborhood protection against criminal activity. Since necessity is truly
the mother of invention, the idea of community policing has emerged as a viable alternative to an otherwise impassable problem. The notion of community policing has become a necessary evil
in todays ever-threatened global society. That criminal activity far surpasses law enforcements ability to keep it in check is indicative of how vital community policing - "a partnership between
the police and the community, sharing in the delivery of police services" (Himelfarb et al, 2002) - has become as a viable way to improve the relationship between public police
and private security. However, as good as any given program might be, there are bound to be drawbacks that serve to impede the very objective it seeks to achieve.
One area in which community policing first became a recognizable force was with the racial unrest of 1964. Instilling a new approach
to addressing the interminable presence of racism, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 helped to establish a precedent of changes throughout society, not the least of which included the concept
of community policing. If communities were going to come together, it had to begin with the manner by which law enforcement behaved when dealing with racial issues. With
a somewhat tarnished history of interracial relations, community policing mandated by the Civil Rights Act represented the opportunity for law enforcement authorities to work with - rather than against -
ethnic criminals in a positive way. "Improving relations between police and urban youth is part of the Community Relations Services concerted national effort to facilitate community oriented policing in
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