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"Horses for Courses" and "Thin Blue Lines": Community Policing in Transitional Society

The export of policing models from the West has a long history. Current export Processes are dominated by the transfer of community policing (COP) models from Anglo-American jurisdictions to societies currently regarded as undergoing a transitional process. The latter are frequently characterized by...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mike Brogden
Format: Printed Book
Published: Police Quarterly 2005; 8; 64 2005
Subjects:
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100 |a Mike Brogden 
245 |a "Horses for Courses" and "Thin Blue Lines": Community Policing in Transitional Society 
260 |c 2005 
260 |b Police Quarterly 2005; 8; 64 
520 |a The export of policing models from the West has a long history. Current export Processes are dominated by the transfer of community policing (COP) models from Anglo-American jurisdictions to societies currently regarded as undergoing a transitional process. The latter are frequently characterized by rising recorded crime rates and a delegitimation of their own police institutions. Consequently, COP appears to offer a welcome respite, especially when encouraged not just by policing missionaries from the West and donor cash but also by a variety of nongovernmental organizations that see COP effectiveness as a human rights resolution to police abuse. Using secondary data from a range of failed and transitional societies, this article challenges the motives, processes, and consequences of the export of such a Western policing model. The end result, from the preliminary evidence, seems to be one of deepening social schism in the country of import. COP is irrelevant to many such societies. 
650 |a POLICE EXPORT POLICING MODEL INDIA 
942 |c KS 
999 |c 70084  |d 70084 
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