TY - JOUR
T1 - Conditions, Actions and Purposes (CAP)
T2 - A Dynamic Model for Community Policing in Europe
AU - O'Neill, Megan
AU - van der Giessen, Mark
AU - Bayerl, Petra
AU - Hail, Yvonne
AU - Aston, Elizabeth
AU - Houtsonen, Jarmo
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Despite its popularity as a policing method and evidence of its positive affect on communities, community policing has defied attempts to establish a clear definition and replicable form. Often regarded as an Anglo-American policing method in origin, community policing is now found across the world and is growing in influence. The need for differentiated local implementation raises important questions regarding the core features of community policing to guide the work of practitioners. Integrating insights from the existing literature and a trans-European project involving 323 interviews with community members and police officers across eight countries, we propose a dynamic model for community policing. In this original model, we differentiate between the conditions, actions and purposes of community policing (CAP) and describe how these core components are required for effective community policing, interrelated, and flexible enough for local implementation. Accordingly, we show how the CAP model is adaptable while at the same time retaining a sense of what makes ‘community policing’ a unique and identifiable policing method. We conclude our study with a discussion of the implications for research and practice internationally.
AB - Despite its popularity as a policing method and evidence of its positive affect on communities, community policing has defied attempts to establish a clear definition and replicable form. Often regarded as an Anglo-American policing method in origin, community policing is now found across the world and is growing in influence. The need for differentiated local implementation raises important questions regarding the core features of community policing to guide the work of practitioners. Integrating insights from the existing literature and a trans-European project involving 323 interviews with community members and police officers across eight countries, we propose a dynamic model for community policing. In this original model, we differentiate between the conditions, actions and purposes of community policing (CAP) and describe how these core components are required for effective community policing, interrelated, and flexible enough for local implementation. Accordingly, we show how the CAP model is adaptable while at the same time retaining a sense of what makes ‘community policing’ a unique and identifiable policing method. We conclude our study with a discussion of the implications for research and practice internationally.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85160333863&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/police/paad014
DO - 10.1093/police/paad014
M3 - Article
SN - 1752-4512
VL - 17
JO - Policing
JF - Policing
M1 - paad014
ER -