Community Engagement Programs can be as simple as “Coffee with a Cop”, where police officers sit and talk with local residents who have questions or concerns. “Coffee with a Cop” talks allow police to connect with their neighbors on a personal level. Instead of just interacting with community members during police calls, Coffee with a Cop” lets police officers and community members related to each other as people. To see each other as more than just us and them, it can open up the lines of communication and build strong community relationships that benefit both the community and the police that serve in them.
The Community and Law Enforcement Report
Monday, May 11, 2015
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Community Engagement Concepts
Community
engagement is a process
in which community benefit organizations and individuals build ongoing, permanent relationships
for the purpose of applying a collective vision for the benefit of a community.
The key concepts of community engagement are:
·
Friendraising
·
Community
impact planning
·
Community-driven
governance
·
Asset-based resource development
·
Vision-based
community impact planning
·
Organizational
wellness planning
·
Building
programs on shared resources
·
Community
sleuthing
·
Community-based
program development
Should The Baltimore Officers Been Charged?
While these officers innocent is played out in courts and in the public. The large questions maybe is, how did these officers get here and was there anything that could have been done to prevent this situation. Surprisingly the answers are yes. If police departments are proactive in adopting community engagement programs, police officers can learn the skills needed to effectively work with communities. I use the words "work with communities" to highlight that public cooperation is critical to good policing. Through effective community engagement training police officers can shed the "us against them mentality" and come to see the community as their most effect tool in policing and avoid situations like the one happening in Baltimore.
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Pew Poll: Multiple Causes Seen for Baltimore Unrest
According to a Pew Research Poll 66% and 54% of blacks say that
people taking advantage of the situation to commit crimes contributed a great
deal to the unrest. Blacks are more likely than whites to say that poverty is a
major cause: 50% of blacks say this contributed a great deal to the turmoil,
compared with 39% of whites. The response was
also split along party lines between Republicans and Democrats in their views
of the factors behind the unrest in Baltimore.
76%
of Republicans say that some people taking advantage of the situation to engage
in criminal behavior contributed a great deal to the violence and unrest in
Baltimore. 50% say tensions between the police and black community contributed
a great deal to the turmoil, and 48% say the same about anger over the death of
Freddie Gray.
In contrast, 63% of Democrats say that tensions
between the police and African-American community were anger over the death of
Freddie Gray. 58% responded it was people taking advantage of the situation to
commit crimes. With 54% responding it contributed a great deal to the unrest in
Baltimore.
Monday, May 4, 2015
Poll: 96% Expect More Racially-Charged Unrest Nationwide
A NBC
News and Wall Street Journal poll reports 96 percent of Americans say that they
expect more racially-charged unrest around the country this coming summer,
similar to the past week's violence in Baltimore. 54 percent believe a similar
disturbance is likely in the metropolitan area closest to where they live. 68
percent believe it is "very likely" that there will be more protests
and clashes around the country. Another 28 percent said that they believe such
unrest is "somewhat likely."
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