Exam 2.3 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the elements of Community-Oriented Policing?

A
  • Police-Community reciprocity: Communication between police and public
  • Areal decentralization of command: Establish substations to increase interaction
  • Reorientation of patrol: Moving from car to foot patrol
  • Civilianization: Employing civilians within police agencies
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2
Q

What are principles of Community-Oriented Policing?

A
  • Citizens should have input in policing
  • Police should put their philosophy into practice
  • Community officers must connect the police and citizens
  • Must help quality of life
  • Relies on human interaction and resourcefulness
  • Must be fully integrated to be most effective
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3
Q

What is the goal of Problem-Oriented Policing?

A

To solve persistent community problems

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4
Q

What is the difference between COP and POP?

A

Their emphases on strategy

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5
Q

What do Problem-Oriented officers do?

A

Identify common problems and develop solutions

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6
Q

What is SARA?

A

4-step problem-solving model
* Scanning
* Analysis
* Response
* Assessment

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7
Q

What is Intelligence-Led Policing?

A
  • Conceptual framework and information-gathering process
  • Allows agencies to better understand their own crime problems and to consider what resources are available before deciding what the most effective strategies are
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8
Q

What is Evidence-Based Policing?

A
  • Supports an informed decision-making process using a scientific method of discovery
  • Research is important for policing-based decisions
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9
Q

What is Hot-Spot Policing?

A
  • High-visibility patrol
  • Zero tolerance enforcement
  • Crackdowns and raids
  • Intensive enforcement of firearm laws
  • Safety frisks during traffic stops
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10
Q

What are Hot Spots?

A

Geographic areas with clusters of crimes that occur within an interval of time

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11
Q

What is Directed Patrol?

A
  • Increasing police presence in an area
  • Focuses officers on specific behaviors, individuals, and places
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12
Q

What is Differential Response Policing?

A
  • Classifies calls by their seriousness to determine appropriate response
  • Rejects idea of dispatching request in the order of the calls received
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13
Q

How are calls classified in Differential Response Policing?

A

Seriousness
* Immediate response
* Delayed response
* No response

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14
Q

What is Saturation Patrol?

A

Adding patrol officers to an area to increase police visibility

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15
Q

What is Situational Crime Prevention?

A

Reduces crime by reducing opportunities for crime and increasing risks for offenders

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16
Q

What are the 5 major strategies in Situational Crime Prevention?

A
  • Increasing effort needed to commit crime
  • Increasing risks associated with crime
  • Reducing reward gained from crime
  • Reducing provocation
  • Removing excuses for committing crime
17
Q

What is Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design?

A

Believes proper design of environment can reduce crime

18
Q

What is Pulling Levers policing?

A

Focuses attention on a small number of repeated offenders that are responsible for a large share of crime problems

19
Q

What is Broken Windows Theory?

A

Believes reducing minor crimes will reduce violent crimes
* Little evidence to support it

Zero-Tolerance Policing

20
Q

What is Procedural Justice policing?

A

Policing model based on empirical research that demonstrats compliance with the law and willingness to cooperate with enforcement efforts are primarily shaped by the strength of citizens’ beliefs that law enforcement agencies are legitimate