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Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION
Rationale
The central goal of community policing is for the police to build
relationships with the community through interactions with local agencies and
members of the public, creating partnerships and strategies for reducing crime
and disorder. Although community policing mostly targets low-level crime and
disorder, the broken window theory proposes that this can reduce more
serious crime as well (Ferreira, 2012).
The standard model of policing generally applies various tactics such
as patrol, arrests, and investigation, so there is little use for crime analysis
beyond determining the level of staffing in particular areas and providing
statistics of police performance (e.g., emergency response time, number of
crime reports, number of cases investigated and solved, number of arrest
(Weisburd & Braga, 2006).
Routine activities theory is closely linked to and shares similar
assumptions with several other theories and perspectives that are collectively
referred to as environmental criminology. Unlike traditional criminology,
environmental criminology has focused primarily on the proximate
environmental and situational factors that facilitate or prevent criminal events.
While not discounting individual differences in motivation to commit crime, the
primary focus of this area of theory and research has been on understanding
the opportunity structures that produce temporal and spatial patterns of crime.
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In addition to routine activities theory, environmental criminology
encompasses the rational choice perspective (Clarke & Cornish, 1985).
Situational crime prevention is grounded in the rational choice
perspective in that it manipulates one or more elements to change the
opportunities for crime and in turn change the decision making of potential
offenders. In terms of routine activities theory, situational crime prevention can
be viewed as the mechanisms by which controllers (i.e., guardians, place
managers, and handlers) discourage crime. Over the past few decades,
researchers and criminal justice practitioners alike have used the techniques
of situational crime prevention to understand crime problems, develop
interventions, and evaluate the effectiveness of those interventions.
Situational crime prevention was designed to address highly specific forms of
crime by systematically manipulating or managing the immediate environment
in as permanent a way as possible, with the purpose of reducing opportunities
for crime as perceived by a wide range of offenders (Clarke, 1997).
Social work as a discipline has made progress in many areas,
including school social work, military social work, and mental health, to name
a few. Conversely, police social work has seen a reduction in advancement
within the last three decades. Police departments and social workers have
traditionally worked together to deal with community problems. In fact
effective prevention, intervention, and stabilization require more than police
action and goes beyond the capability of any single agency. Studies show that
social services provision has always been a key part of policing, operating
alongside service to victims of crimes and the enforcement of the law against
offenders. The purpose of this study is twofold: (1) to explore whether police
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departments in the state of Minnesota provide social services to crime victims
and witnesses and to residents seeking social service assistance in non-crime
situations; and (2) to explore strategies for hiring social workers within the
agency, and to enhance effective collaboration with the new hires during
specific types of responses to interventions, such as mental health crises and
domestic violence (Chamberlain, 2016). Community Policing: Comparative
Perspectives and Prospects maintains that from the perspectives of both
community and police, community policing signifies that crime is produced by
societal factors over which police have relatively little control and therefore
crime control needs to focus on those societal factors which cause crime and
should focus more on ‘quality of life’ issues that exceed crime. Fear of crime
also needs to be attended to in attention to ‘traditional’ crime issues
(Friedmann, 2003).
Research Objective
The primary purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness of the
police service oriented activities especially in the community.
Specifically, the study attempted to answer the following questions.
1. What is the level of Service Oriented Activities of Police Officers in terms of:
1.1 Assistance rendered;
1.2 Safety and education talks; and
1.3 Neighbourhood and business checks?
2. What intervention can be formulated based on the findings of the study?
Review of Related Literature
4
This chapter consists of information called from the studies and literature
from which the particular study is premised. This further discusses the
indicators of effective and accountable preventive measures of Philippine
National Police which has been applied to different police stations. And to the
services they rendered in the community.
Assistance Rendered by Police officers
To arrest and detain a suspect, state police officers must have probable
cause to believe a crime has either already happened, is in progress or is
about to take place. The officer must advise the suspect of his legal rights,
known as a Miranda warning, and must respect the suspect's right to suspend
interrogation until a lawyer is present. Officers must know the proper way to
make an arrest, execute a proper arrest warrant and conduct a "stop and
frisk" search. The officer must be able to retain enough information about the
incident to provide the prosecutor with sufficient details to craft a formal
complaint (Brown, 2010).
State police departments employ a number of forensic professionals who
handle the collection and preservation of crime scene evidence. Initial
responding officers must secure the crime scene to make certain it is not
contaminated with outside evidence. Forensic officers will take pictures,
collect samples, label evidence, lift fingerprints, examine deceased victims for
evidence and diagram crime scenes. State police must also maintain strict
chain of custody protocol after evidence is collected to ensure evidence is not
destroyed or lost (Goldstein, 2012).
State police officers are bound by federal and state search and seizure
laws and are required to keep abreast of any changes implemented by courts
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or the legislature. A valid warrant must accompany any search or seizure of
property, subject to limited exceptions. State police are bound to search only
areas listed in the warrant and must monitor all officers during the execution
of a warrant to ensure protocol is followed. If contraband is uncovered during
the search, it must be properly labeled and sent to the state police crime lab
for analysis (Ankony, 2011).
The state police force is responsible for rendering emergency assistance
in the event of a natural disaster, major car accident or other tragedy. Officers
must be able to quickly assess a situation and request immediate backup
from fire, HAZMAT or medical response teams. Officers may be responsible
for evacuating citizens, rescuing individuals perilously stranded, and providing
basic first aid and CPR. State police might also respond to threats of suicide,
family disputes, and disturbances from those with mental conditions or any
situation endangering the life of a child (Burden, 2012).
Interrogations and Interviews
Once a suspect is in custody, the state police will begin interrogating him
about the details surrounding the alleged crime. State police are trained to
implement different interrogation techniques designed to elicit information the
suspect might not otherwise divulge. Police also must also interview
witnesses and victims to receive further details about the crime. This can
sometimes include child-victim witnesses or those victimized by sexual
offenders (Stephen, 2010).
If the criminal charges reach the trial stage, the state police officer will be
called to testify about his personal experiences regarding the suspect. This
can include sources of information gathered prior to arrest, whether arrest
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protocol was followed, and the nature of evidence used to obtain a warrant.
For this reason, state police are trained to immediately record the events of an
arrest for reference in the eventual trial. In addition to a criminal trial, officers
may be called upon to present testimony before a grand jury or at preliminary
and motion hearings (Bratton, 2013).
PNP members shall promote and maintain sense of responsibility in the
protection, proper care and judicious disposition and use of public property
issued for their official use or entrusted to their care and custody just like “a
good father of their family”. When the Commander/Director is relieved from
his post, all properties/equipment belonging to the government must be
turned-over to the incoming. A committee for the purpose shall be proper.
Hence, it is a taboo for outgoing Commander/Director to detach, remove and
bring home or to his new assignment properties which do not personally
belong to him (PNP, 2016).
In the performance of duty, PNP members shall respect and protect
human dignity and uphold the human rights of all persons. No member shall
inflict, instigate or tolerate extra-judicial killings, arbitrary arrests, any act of
torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment and
shall not invoke superior orders or exceptional circumstances such as a state
–of-war, a threat to national security, internal political instability or any public
emergency as a justification for committing such human rights violations (PNP
Declaration, 2016).
Perspective focuses on people but it must be complemented by strategies
under the third perspective, "process excellence". This refers to the different
processes and practices the PNP uses in carrying out its mission. The four
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processes of "intelligence," "investigation," "operations," and "police
community relations" are given top consideration. In addition, two concrete
strategic priorities are highlighted. These are: "improvement on crime
prevention and control" and "improving community safety awareness through
community-oriented and human rights based policing (PNP, 2016)
A key aspect of police patrol is providing a high visibility for the police
force in a neighborhood. Visible patrolling officers provide residents, visitors,
and others in an area a strengthened sense of safety and security. That's one
reason officers who are serving on certain types of patrol, particularly in
neighborhoods, will appear conspicuously in uniforms and marked patrol cars.
They will visit both prominent locations and locations where past crimes have
occurred to improve a sense of safety in those areas (Kelling, 2014).
Safety and education talks by Police officers
Police agencies have long provided services to schools. It has only
been in the past two decades, however, that assigning police officers to
schools on a full-time basis has become a widespread practice. An estimated
one-third of all sheriffs’ offices and almost half of all municipal police
departments assign nearly 17,000 sworn officers to serve in schools.
Moreover, nearly half of all public schools have assigned police officers.
These officers are commonly referred to as school resource officers (SROs)
or education resource officers. They are intended to serve various roles:
safety expert and law enforcer, problem solver and liaison to community
resources, and educator. Assigning officers to schools is becoming
increasingly popular. SRO programs have been encouraged through federal
funding support to local jurisdictions. As the trend toward having police in
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schools grows, it is important to understand when and how assigning police
officers to schools can be an appropriate strategy for schools and police
agencies (Schuler, 2010).
Educational and advisory activities consistently feature as part of police
officers’ responsibilities in their work with schools. Typically, these activities
are aimed at increasing young people’s understanding, and knowledge, of a
range of topics related to crime and personal safety, as well as supporting
improvements in their well-being and overall quality of life. Police are involved
in various curriculum activities…bringing them in to talk about issues of
gangs, or knife crime [at secondary level] and at primary level it is more about
talks on lower-levels such as road safety, issues to do with crime or drugs.
The police are also known to contribute to school assemblies. However, the
educational aspect of police work with schools is not limited to school hours or
the classroom, as extra-curricular activities also feature regularly as part of
their work, either on or off the school site. In school this can include police
taking breakfast clubs, homework or after-school clubs, attending school
events to raise the visibility of police involvement with the school, or
supervising school discos on ‘troublesome nights’.( Burgess, 2012).
Police can also act as a bridge between schools and their local
communities, enabling wider, multi-agency work. Police officers share their
existing knowledge of, and links with, local community and voluntary groups,
or other public agencies to facilitate the provision of additional services to the
school and its pupils. Similarly, police support the sharing of information, data
and intelligence both with the schools in which they work and, as appropriate,
with parents or careers. In this respect, police can also be involved in the
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collation of information through their participation in monitoring and evaluation
processes. The capacity to link schools to other agencies can complement
police officers’ other roles in the school. For example, if a police officer has
identified a young person at risk of, or involved in, offending, or who has been
the victim of a crime, they may be able to identify an appropriate agency for
the school to work with or to which the young person can be referred.
Alternatively, a police officer can work in a multiagency capacity within the
school. For example, he/she may contribute to the design and implementation
of Individual Education Plans (IEPs) and Individual Behaviour Plan (IBPs)
(Clark, 2010).
Reflecting this gap, the evidence from the case studies and interviews
with strategic-level representatives indicates that this is currently an area in
need of development. Historically, a national, accredited training programme
was available to police officers working as part of Safer Schools Partnerships;
however this has now ceased. In the absence of such formal training, a
number of different training practices have developed to equip police in
schools with the knowledge and understanding necessary for this type of role.
There are reports of some informal, on-the-job training where police officers
new to the role shadow police colleagues or attend meetings for police
officers in similar roles. Additionally, the case-study evidence reveals a few
examples where bespoke training has been developed or arranged jointly or
unilaterally by the Safer School Partnership or the police force. In these
examples, the training provided to the police has included inductions when
starting work with schools, protocols setting out the parameters and
expectations of the role, and formal training programmes. Indeed, in one
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police force, a two-week training programme is offered to all SSP officers, as
well as one-off training opportunities.(Dean, 2005)
By being in schools, police officers have enhanced access to young
people, who they are able to influence and work alongside for a sustained
period of time as pupils progress through the school years. Police officers
from the case-study schools feel that this leads to greater impacts on young
people than any one-off initiative can offer. The officers are also able to
access all of the young people in a community, and can increase their contact
with, and influence over, young people at risk. Police working in schools
naturally opens up young people’s access to police support. This leads on to
many of the impacts for pupils that are set out in the following sections: to
improved relationships and perceptions of the police. (Burgess, 2006)
When police officers work more closely with schools, pupils’ levels of
offending behaviour reduce. For example, levels of substance misuse drop,
fewer offensive weapons are carried and fewer offences or cases of criminal
damage occur in and around schools. In some cases, this is due to specific
programmes and interventions (e.g. visits to prisons and meeting prisoners as
a deterrent, weapon awareness programmes), in others, it is due to
understanding what constitutes a criminal offence and the consequences of
crime, or because early intervention and work with young people at risk of
offending reduces any subsequent criminal activity. It has also been reported
that using methods such as restorative justice, and working more closely with
young people, can avoid criminalisation of young people and, hence, this
reduces levels of reported crimes (Clark, 2010).
Neighbourhood and business checks rendered to the community
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Police and community residents share a typical concern for maintaining
safe, quality neighborhoods. Practitioners and researchers assume that the
police and teams within the communities within which the police
investigation will “jointly produce” bound public safety outcomes, like feelings
of safety or worry, levels of disorder and crime, and levels of trust and
cooperation. There’s spare analysis on policing impacts to recommend that
the police, even operating alone, will result crime, disorder, fear, and
satisfaction with the police, for restricted periods of your time. This
same analysis indicates that police alone cannot maintain those
temporary enhancements in communities unless one thing else happens
within the neighborhood. The ultimate goal in police-community collaboration
is getting that “something else” to occur. Neighbors observing the police
reduce crime is not the same as neighbors gaining experience in controlling
crime with the police. Some things that the police do to reduce or prevent
crime may promote dependency of the citizenry on the police and thereby
reduce the strength of civic institutions, even if they have short term positive
effects on crime. Other things the police may do to reduce or prevent crime
may promote neighborhood resident experience in civic engagement that
strengthens civic institutions and allows residents to solve other problems in
the future. When police make this contribution to civic engagement, we can
talk about police community building. “Community building” processes are
community activities that build community capacity. (Skogan, 1990)
Encouragement of the officers to the community
A “one-way” process; the active participation of neighborhood residents
often encourages initial police partnerships, and reinforces police and resident
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commitments toward working together. The Fairlawn neighborhood of
Washington, DC, implemented citizen patrols as a deterrent strategy to
address increased drug dealing. Local police provided protection for the early
citizen patrols by walking with them and soon realized the perseverance
among the Fairlawn Coalition members. Resident perseverance in turn
bolstered police activities in the neighborhood, which ultimately improved
police-resident communication over drug investigations and helped further a
creative, problem solving partnership (Winter, 2011).
Law enforcement learned that they were not providing enough time at
the meeting for community members to talk about their services, that there
were no opportunities for community members to meet informally to
encourage probationers and parolees to use the services, and probationers
were not taking advantage of any of the services offered. These results were
used to refocus the meetings, as well as devise other strategies to provide
information to probationers about services. Another example from the
Indianapolis Violence Reduction Partnership involved a public education
campaign intended to communicate a message of community intolerance of
violence. These messages were relayed to the community using posters,
billboards, and radio commercials. Following implementation of the campaign,
interviews were conducted with individuals who had recently been arrested.
Self-described gang members, who had been shown to be at high-risk for
being involved in firearms violence, were much more likely to report having
seen these messages on city busses (Maguire, 2012).
The results of the empirical evaluation of policing demands
reconsideration and reform of the basic nature and structure of policing in
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America. The 1990s have spawned a number of innovative efforts to make
police work productive by engaging in cooperative strategies with the
community to proactively prevent and reduce crime and disorder and to
increase the quality of services police offer their communities. These efforts to
develop a more socially constructive vision of policing have been included
under the rubric of community policing. The "tactical focus" of these efforts
has been problem oriented policing strategies. Community and problem-
oriented policing programs have become more accepted, and police
departments have increasingly attempted to adopt this philosophy over the
past decade with limited success (Bazemore & Cole, 2014).
While some have tried to clearly define community and problem
oriented policing n practice community policing programs have taken on a
variety of forms, goals and objectives. The implicit and explicit goals of
community policing have included: reducing crime and disorder reducing fear
of crime increasing clearance rates increasing public satisfaction with the
police decreasing complaints against police increasing police job satisfaction
engaging the community in police activities reducing calls for service
increasing police effectiveness; and increasing service provision (Melekian,
2012)
Reports are largely mix regarding the impact of community policing
programs. Several studies show a reduction in crime and disorder because of
community policing efforts while others show no significant effect. Reductions
in fear of crime have appeared successful in some cases and unsuccessful or
ambiguous in others. A review of several fear-reduction studies in Houston
and Newark showed that community-oriented efforts appeared to reduce fear
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of crime, as well as improve citizens' views of crime and disorder problems in
the community (Wycoff, 2013)
There is little conclusive research on changes in clearance rate with
the exception of one study which indicates no significant increase. No studies
show an increase or decrease in complaints against police. One study shows
a reduction in calls for service. Increases in service provision were noted in
another study (Gaines, 2014).
Despite broad-based support for the philosophy of community policing,
translating theory into specific police programs has proven difficult. There has
been an absence of a clear line of development as to how to put community
policing ideas into practice. While there have been isolated incidents of
successes of community policing, attempts to implement community policing
have been largely limited to specialized units of officers and have not
permeated the command-and-control functions of everyday police work
(Couper & Lobitz, 2012).
Factors working against the implementation of community policing are
traditional police norms and police organizational and subcultural resistance
including traditional assumptions about patrol strategies bureaucratic isolation
of community programs within the police agency, the need for police to react
to emergencies and the limits of police authority. Resource limitations also
were discussed as an obvious but significant obstacle to implementing
community policing (Skolnick & Bayley, 2013).
Community policing concept despite its current lack of scientific
validation. Others warn against letting the rhetoric of community policing cloud
its reality, such calls attention to the gulf between what is claimed and
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assumed by the movement's advocates and what is known or can reasonably
be expected. The community policing model appears to need further
conceptualization and empirical elaboration, despite its apparent
popularity (Mastrofski, 2012).
Changing police culture and organization means changing the beliefs,
attitudes and behaviors of police, both individually, and collectively. In the
history of the transition to the police professionalism model "particular types of
police officer attitudes indicative of police professionalism became linked to
the ideology of police reform and to the culture of the management cop.
Similarly, particular beliefs and attitudes have been linked to ideology in the
transition to community policing (Crank, Payn & Jackson, 2013).
The voices of the police chiefs heard in this report are varied and
reflect a broad policing experience. What the chiefs have in common is a
continuing interest in delivering the best quality police service to the
communities they serve. The chiefs have come to understand that community
policing is quality police service, and that it reflects the highest ideals of
policing in a democracy. Democracy is always challenging and often may
seem untidy; delivering on the promise of community policing can have those
same qualities. Nonetheless, when it comes to policing in a democracy, there
is nothing better than community policing (Gra-ig, 2013).
Community policing as their philosophy and approach to policing. They
have worked diligently to instil the community policing philosophy and its
principles in their agencies. Agencies committed to community policing
develop partnerships with their community, address recurring crime and
disorder issues through problem-solving techniques, and transform the
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organization to support these efforts. Through these actions, police
departments seek to provide the community with the best policing services
possible, to promote integrity within the department, and to increase trust and
cooperation between the police and the people they serve (Vernon, 2013).
The success of community policing can be seen across the country in
agencies that define community policing as their way of doing business. In
fact, one is hard pressed to find a chief who does not support community
policing or a mayor or city manager who does not list community policing as
part of the job description for the city’s police chief. Language referring to an
agency’s commitment to community policing also can be seen in mission
statements, recruiting materials, business cards, web sites, and many other
places (Larry, 2013).
These roundtable meetings also focused on the challenges to
advancing community policing and what lies ahead for community policing in
the near future. The three roundtables were held in February and March 2007
in White Plains, New York; Arlington, Texas; and Richmond, California.4 More
than 60 police chiefs, policing leaders, and academics attended the meetings.
In addition to the roundtable meetings, a session on the challenges facing
community policing was held at PERF’s Annual Meeting in April 2007.5 The
annual meeting session provided an additional opportunity for chiefs and
policing leaders to have their voices heard, particularly those who live outside
of the three metropolitan areas where roundtable meetings were held (Carroll,
2013).
Community policing as quality police service—service that upholds
democratic principles. As such, community policing seeks to improve public
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safety and the quality of life for all persons within the community. Yet police
departments alone cannot do either of these things— and those that try are
not successful. Rather, public safety and improving quality of life are the
responsibility of both the police and the community. The community is
identified as community-based organizations, businesses, individual
community members, and other government agencies at all levels (e.g.,
municipal code enforcement or public works or state corrections agencies)
(Green, 2012).
Community policing today involves the police partnering with the
community to address public safety issues and improve the quality of life.
Police and the community work together to identify problems and to respond
to community concerns and needs. These efforts help build community trust.
Roundtable participants stressed that, as much as possible, police
department efforts should focus on being proactive or co-active, instead of
reactive. This includes taking steps to cultivate trusting partnerships in good
times, instead of just during a crisis. It also involves looking at problems from
a holistic perspective and analyzing them to identify trends or linkages. At the
same time, these efforts do not diminish the ability of the police to pursue
enforcement efforts to resolve public safety problems. Enforcement is an
important tool in community policing—a point that participants felt was too
often lost in the early days of community policing (Boyd, 2012).
Theoretical Framework
Service-oriented metrics-such as assistance rendered, safety and
education talks, neighborhood and business checks, and other
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community oriented activities can be included-and encouraged- in
performance measures. These only can measures help provide a truer picture
of what the real mission of policing is (or should be) but also encourage
greater community engagement to help bridge the all-too-apparent gap
between cops and community.
This study is anchored on the concept of Zoe (2012) about the strong
connections common have certainty between police organizations and
networks they serve are vital to holding open security and brilliant policing.
Police authorities rely on the collaboration of network members to outfit
information about wrongdoing in their neighborhoods and to work with the
police to devise choices to wrongdoing and infection issues. Additionally
neighborhood individuals' eagerness to have certainty the police depends
upon on whether they concur with that police moves mirror neighborhood
esteems and contain the standards of procedural equity and authenticity.
This account is also supported by the study of Waka Kotahi (2006)
from his work, Police School Community Officers says that School Community
Officers (formerly called Police Education Officers) are experienced police
officers who specialize in facilitating and delivering prevention-based
interventions and services in collaboration with whole school communities,
to enhance community safety, including road safety. During 2013, the Police
launched a safety education framework and started a range of new whole
school approach interventions for schools. These interventions provide
opportunities for schools to work within the three strands of the whole school
approach:
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Furthermore, Docobo (2005) community policing requires an
organizational transformation inside the law enforcement agency sothat a set
of basic values rather than mere procedures guide the overall delivery of
services to the community. Over the years, law enforcement organizations
have sought to address the causes and reduce the fear of crime in
communities through the creation of effective partnerships with the community
and other public and private-sector resources, the application of problem-
solving strategies or tactics, and the transformation of agency organization
and culture.
The community now demands that both institutions combine resources
and skills to reach those in crisis and victims of crime. Currently, there are
social work police partnerships in several jurisdictions that follow the crisis
intervention paradigm involving three stages: response, stabilization and
prevention. Police calls for service are crisis situations where police respond,
stabilize and then partner with human service agencies that provide client
based services and case management to prevent the problems that result in
subsequent calls for service.
Conceptual Framework
Figure 1 the independent variable of police oriented services such as:
Assistance rendered is a synonym of make technically it means "cause to
become." An illness might render you unable to walk, or a shocking site
might render you speechless. A safety and education talk is the teaching of
specific knowledge, skills and understanding that children need in order to
stay safe in a given situation. Neighbourhood business checks refer to be
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printed for a specific organization or company and parts of a town where
people live.
Police Oriented Services
Assistance rendered
Safety and education BASIS FOR
ACTION
talks
PLAN
Neighbourhood
business checks
Figure 1. The Conceptual Paradigm of the Study
Significance of the Study
This study examines the influence of officers’ and supervisors’ attitudes
and priorities toward community policing and problem solving over the time
officers spend conducting problem-solving activities. A multi-method study of
police patrol in two police departments, results show that officers’ perceptions
of their supervisors’ priorities for problem solving affect the amount of time
they spend conducting these activities, although their own attitudes toward
community policing are unrelated to their behavior. We also find that officers’
attitudes regarding problem solving are weakly correlated with their
supervisors’ attitudes and, further, that officers’ perceptions of their
supervisors’ attitudes are often inaccurate.
The relationship of the community and the law enforcers is so important
to gather all the ideas and information about the safety of all. Without the help
of the community the officers cannot go for the investigation and without the
help of the people, the police will find information on their part, particularly
21
those small information to solve the crime. So that this study gives importance
to the relativity of the people and the police officers and all of their services
rendered to the community.
Definition of Terms
To understand more the study, the following terms are conceptually
and operationally defined as follows:
Community policing, or community-oriented policing, is a strategy of
policing that focuses on building ties and working closely with members of the
communities.
Police Social Work – practice based profession and an academic discipline
that promotes social change and development, social cohesion, and the
empowerment and liberation of people. Policing are strategic concepts that
seek to redefine the ends and the means of policing. Problem-solving policing
focuses police attention on the problems that lie behind incidents, rather than
on the incidents only.
Problem Solving – Problem-solving and community policing are strategic
concepts that seeks to redefine the ends and the means of policing. Problem-
solving policing focuses police attention on the problems that lie behind
incidents, rather than on the incidents only.
Problem-Oriented Policing – is a policing strategy that involves the
identification and analysis of specific crime and disorder problems, in order to
develop effective response strategies.
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Chapter 2
METHODOLOGY
This chapter discusses the research design, the research subject,
research instrument, the data gathering procedure and the statistical
treatment of the data. This will serve as guide to the readers in understanding
on how and where the study will be conducted.
Research Design
This study is quantitative non-experimental research design using
descriptive and correlational techniques. This method was used when the
objective is to describe the status of the situation as it existed at the time of
the study to explore the causes of a particular phenomenon. In correlation
research, it involved collecting data in order to determine whether the degree
of a relationship exists between two of more quantifiable variables (Travers,
2006).
Research Subject
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This study will be conducted in Tagum City. The respondents are the
community members of Tagum City. Table 1 presents respondents of the
study.
Research Instruments
The researchers will use a survey questionnaire and collect study related data
from the respondents. Research made questionnaire will be used for the
convenience of both researchers and the researchers and the
respondents of the study. The first set of the questionnaire will be the
indicators of the independent variables of the study the service oriented
activities of police officer in terms.
For the service oriented activities of police officer the following was
used:
Range of Means Descriptive Interpretation
4.3-5.0 Very High This means that the service oriented
activities of police officer is very
much observed.
3.5-4.2 High This means that the service oriented
activities of police officer is much
observed.
.
2.7-3.4 Moderate This means that the service oriented
activities of police officer is
moderately observed.
1.9-2.6 Low This means that the service oriented
activities of police officer students is
less observed.
1.0-1.8 Very Low This means that the service oriented
Is not observed.
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Figure 1. Map of Barangay Mankilam Tagum City Davao Del Norte
25
Figure 1. Map of Barangay
South Tagum City Davao Del Norte
26
Figure 2. Map of Barangay Apokon, Tagum City Davao Del Norte
27
Table1. Distribution of Respondents
Barangay Male Female No. of Participants
Mankilam 20 20 40
South 15 15 30
Apokon 15 15 30
Total 50 50 100
Data Gathering Procedures
The researchers undergo the following procedures in gathering
significant data for the study:
After the proposal was approved the researchers constructed a
questionnaire and presented to the thesis adviser for final modification to the
panel of experts for the validation and approval. The researchers wrote a
letter to the school noted by their adviser and subject teacher asking for
permission of conducting study.
After the verification of the questionnaires the researchers will now
distribute it to the respondents. Appropriate instructions were accorded to the
respondents on how to answer the questions it was based on their
understanding and experienced. After that researchers will submit all the raw
data they collected from the respondents to the statistician for the statistical
result.
Data Collection
The technique that is being used in gathering data is interview. The
purpose of interview is to find out if what is in the minds of someone else and
to know their service oriented activities of police officer when it comes to the
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product. Data collection methods help the researchers gather more
information.
The Participants were given a questionnaire and it was on their own if
they will answer it or not. They are not forced to answer that questionnaire.
And when they accept it the researchers will set the date and place if where
they can meet. Being nice and be pleasant will create a comfortable. When
the interview start the researcher will listen and take notes the important
things and when it’s done the participants may add on to. When the
interviews finally have all the information needed the meeting was ended
with thank you.
Statistical Tools
The result were analyzed and interpreted in the light and purposes of
the study. The following statistical tools used are the following.
Mean. This tool was used to determine the level of service oriented
activities of police officer in Tagum City.
Data Analysis
The researchers need not to be biased and single minded in analysing
data as stated by Creswell (1998). As stated by Keenly what is being
presented here is but one possible manner of phenomenological analysing
data. It is presented more as an attempt to sensitize the researcher to a
number of issues that need to be addressed in analysing interview data rather
than as a "cookbook" procedure. Giorgi (1971) strongly emphasizes that any
research method must arise out of trying to be responsive to the
phenomenon. No method (including this one) can be arbitrarily imposed on a
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phenomenon since that would do a great injustice to the integrity of that
phenomenon. A focus group is, according to Lederman (see Thomas et al.
1995), a technique involving the use of in-depth group interviews in which
participants are selected because they are a purposive, although not
necessarily representative, sampling of a specific population, this group being
‘focused’ on a given topic.
Trustworthiness
In qualitative research the researchers must need to work hard on the
study. Consideration on trustworthiness and credibility that matter the most.
The trustworthiness of qualitative research is often questioned by positivists
perhaps because their concepts of validity and reliability cannot be addressed
in the same way in naturalistic works. Nevertheless several writers on
research methods notably Silverman have demonstrated how qualitative
research can incorporate measures that deal with these issues and
investigators such as Pitts. Many naturalistic investigators have however
preferred to use different terminology to distance themselves from the
positivist paradigm.
Credibility means quality of being trusted and believed in. One of the
key criteria addressed by positivist researchers is that of internal validity, in
which they seek to ensure that their study measures or tests what is actually
intended. According to Merriam, the qualitative investigator’s equivalent
concept credibility, deals with the question, how congruent are the findings
with reality? Lincoln and Guba argue that ensuring credibility is one of most
important factors in establishing trustworthiness. The development of an early
familiarity with the culture of participating organizations before the first data
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collection dialogues take place. This may be achieved via consultation of
appropriate documents and preliminary visits to the organizations themselves.
Lincoln and Guba and Erlandson et al. are among the many who recommend
“prolonged engagement” between the investigator and the participants in
order both for the former to gain an adequate understanding of an
organization and to establish a relationship of trust between the parties. The
danger emerges, however, that if too many demands are made on staff,
gatekeepers responsible for allowing the researcher access to the
organization may be deterred from cooperating. The investigator may also
react with some suspicion to the notion of prolonged engagement in view of
the undesirable side effects that have been noted by Lincoln and Guba and
Silverman.
Triangulation may involve the use of different methods, especially
observation, focus groups and individual interviews, which form the major
data collection strategies for much qualitative research. Whilst focus groups
and individual interviews suffer from some common methodological
shortcomings since both are interviews of a kind, their distinct characteristics
also result in individual strengths. According to Guba and Brewer and Hunter,
the use of different methods in concert compensates for their individual
limitations and exploits their respective benefits
Transferability means transferred from one context to another.
Merriam stated that external validity “is concerned with the extent to which the
findings of one study can be applied to other situations”. In positivist work, the
concern often lies in demonstrating that the results of the work at hand can be
applied to a wider population. Since the findings of a qualitative project are
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specific to a small number of particular environments and individuals, it is
impossible to demonstrate that the findings and conclusions are applicable to
other situations and populations. Erlandson et al. note that many naturalistic
inquirers believe that, in practice, even conventional generalizability is never
possible as all observations are defined by the specific contexts in which they
occur.
Dependability In addressing the issue of reliability, the positivist
employs techniques to show that, if the work were repeated, in the same
context, with the same methods and with the same participants, similar results
would be obtained. However, as Fidel and Marshall and Rossman note, the
changing nature of the phenomena scrutinized by qualitative researchers
renders such provisions problematic in their work. Florio-Ruane highlights
how the investigator’s observations are tied to the situation of the study,
arguing that the “published descriptions are static and frozen in the
‘ethnographic present’ ” [Lincoln and Guba stress the close ties between
credibility and dependability, arguing that, in practice, a demonstration of the
former goes some distance in ensuring the latter.
Confirmability Patton associates objectivity in science with the use of
instruments that are not dependent on human skill and perception. He
recognizes, however, the difficulty of ensuring real objectivity, since, as even
tests and questionnaires are designed by humans, the intrusion of the
researcher’s biases is inevitable. The concept of confirmability is the
qualitative investigator’s comparable concern to objectivity. Here steps must
be taken to help ensure as far as possible that the work’s findings are the
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result of the experiences and ideas of the informants, rather than the
characteristics and preferences of the researcher.
Ethical Consideration
We highly respect our participants since without them our study will not
be completed they are most important in this study. And during in our
interview we make sure that they are not forced to answer that question and
they are not forced to be our participants and be part of our study. And we will
not force them to share their thoughts and experience instead we encourage
them to tell I’m what is in their mind.
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Chapter 3
PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS OF FINDINGS
This chapter contains the data gathered for this study with the title of
Service Oriented Activities of Police Officers: Basis for Intervention Program
from the Bachelor Science in Criminology Program. The data are presented in
both textual and tabular forms.
Level of Service Oriented Activities of Police Officers
The research analysis determines the extent of the assessment on
service oriented activities of police officers in terms of assistance rendered,
safety and education talks, neighbourhood and business checks is much
presented in table 1.
The level of Service Oriented Activities of Police Officers got overall
mean of 4.5 which is categorized as very high with a standard deviation of
0.39. This means that the level service oriented activities of police officers is
very much observed.
Specifically, results display in accordance to each evaluative results,
the Safety and Education Talks got a highest mean of 4.4 with standard
deviation of 0.56 described as very high. Second, Neighbourhood and
Business Checks got mean of 4.5 with standard deviation of 0.40 described
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as very high. Last, Assistance Rendered got mean of 4.4 with standard
deviation of 0.61 described as very high.
This means that the public area surveillance among people is very
much observed. Moreover, this means that public areas has various video
surveillance. CCTV cameras are everywhere in the public places making
crime harder to initiate. This means that the public area surveillance is very
much observed. Thus, resulting to a well-monitored area to connect with their
community and engage its members in public safety matters, community-
policing efforts. Some of the challenges discussed at the meetings included
how to hold the community accountable for its responsibilities in a community-
policing environment.
Table 3. Level of Service Oriented Activities of Police Officers
Indicators x́ SD Descriptive Level
Assistance Rendered 4.4 0.61 Very High
Safety and Education Talks 4.5 0.56 Very High
Neighbourhood and Business 4.5 0.40 Very High
Checks
4.5 0.39 Very High
Overall
The Assistance rendered is very high which means that the police
officers are very much oriented in assisting the people. This connotes that the
police officers are always able to render assistance during school activities
and to individual citizens that needed them.
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On the other hand, Safety and Education Talks is also very high which
means that the police officers are always able recruit and contact person
willing to appear, speak at the community meetings, schools, other gathering
places about the effects of the use of illegal drugs or related in crime.
Finally, the Neighbourhood and Business Checks was also very high
which means that the police are very much particular in addressing
neighborhood concerns. This further means that the residents and barangay
participate with the police department to resolve neighborhood concerns. And
that the establishments are regularly monitored by the police.
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