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This study used Oakland, CA and Birmingham, AL to test the effectiveness of several different policing models for controlling street-level drug trafficking. The study examines the model’s impact on the reduction of reported crimes as well as citizens’ perceptions of their own safety and the extent of crime in their neighborhoods. Data was obtained through multiple door-to-door interviews in both Oakland and Birmingham. The Police Foundation combined the survey data with reported crime date to evaluate and analyze the different models of policing practices.
This Research in Brief highlights the study’s findings with an indepth look at how large police departments are dealing with drug trafficking and drug-related crime. The study concludes that the new methods of policing left citizens believing that police were more effective than prior to the experiments. Furthermore, crime rates in the experimental neighborhoods decreased, particularly for violent crimes.
This study used Oakland, CA and Birmingham, AL to test the effectiveness of several different policing models for controlling street-level drug trafficking. The study examines the model’s impact on the reduction of reported crimes as well as citizens’ perceptions of their own safety and the extent of crime in their neighborhoods. Data was obtained through multiple door-to-door interviews in both Oakland and Birmingham. The Police Foundation combined the survey data with reported crime date to evaluate and analyze the different models of policing practices.
This Research in Brief highlights the study’s findings with an indepth look at how large police departments are dealing with drug trafficking and drug-related crime. The study concludes that the new methods of policing left citizens believing that police were more effective than prior to the experiments. Furthermore, crime rates in the experimental neighborhoods decreased, particularly for violent crimes.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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This study used Oakland, CA and Birmingham, AL to test the effectiveness of several different policing models for controlling street-level drug trafficking. The study examines the model’s impact on the reduction of reported crimes as well as citizens’ perceptions of their own safety and the extent of crime in their neighborhoods. Data was obtained through multiple door-to-door interviews in both Oakland and Birmingham. The Police Foundation combined the survey data with reported crime date to evaluate and analyze the different models of policing practices.
This Research in Brief highlights the study’s findings with an indepth look at how large police departments are dealing with drug trafficking and drug-related crime. The study concludes that the new methods of policing left citizens believing that police were more effective than prior to the experiments. Furthermore, crime rates in the experimental neighborhoods decreased, particularly for violent crimes.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Verfügbare Formate
Als PDF, TXT herunterladen oder online auf Scribd lesen