Media MonitorSUBSCRIBE 103065 total results. Showing results 60901 to 60920 «304230433044304530463047304830493050Next ›Last » Three more arrests as police continue ‘mammoth operation’ to infiltrate sophisticated encryption system used by gangs Three men are being held in custody on suspicion of firearm and drug offences. Manchester Evening News 3/12/2020 News We Need to Talk About Dialogue: Accomplishing Collaborative Sensemaking in Homicide Investigations In this paper, we explore the importance of dialogue for collaborative sensemaking during homicide investigation, focusing upon interactions between detectives, forensic scientists and other experts involved in managing and undertaking forensic work. Drawing on data from a 4-year ethnographic study of British homicide investigations, we provide insights from criminal justice actors about both the value of, and barriers to, inter-professional and cross-disciplinary dialogue. We explore how and why organisational arrangements may limit opportunities for forensic scientists and other experts to engage collaboratively with detectives and prosecutors. We conclude by considering ways to enhance collaborative sensemaking during the investigation of homicide. Police Journal - Registration at source 3/12/2020 Research article Limitations in Cross-National Comparative Research The Mass Media in Cyprus announced that, according to the Eurostat (2019) “Police, Court and Prison Personnel Statistics”, Cyprus has the highest ratio of police officers per 100.000 inhabitants among all EU member states. To examine this outcome, the Cyprus Police conducted cross-national research comparing the organization’s population and duties with those of other Law Enforcement Agencies in the European Union. This article will elaborate on the limitations of cross-national comparative research, which the authors came across during the aforementioned study. It will argue that even a subject as straightforward as the number of police officers is not directly comparable between countries in terms of necessity or efficiency, without taking into consideration the particular context of each given country. A quantitative comparison, which does not explore the background and contextual information on Law Enforcement Agencies in each country, can be questioned with regards to serious methodological issues, while its outcomes run the risk of being regarded as misleading. European Law Enforcement Research Bulletin 3/12/2020 Research article The European Code of Police Ethics 20 Years on This article reflects a conference contribution as presented by the author on behalf of CEPOL- the EU Agency for law enforcement training, to the Council of Europe conference on the role of police in democratic societies. After a historical examination of the context leading to the publication of the European Code of Police Ethics against the backdrop of the 2004 EU Enlargement after the decade of reforms in the countries of the former Eastern European block, the article examines the importance and the challenges of fundamental rights and police ethics from a training viewpoint ,against the backdrop of the changing landscape of policing in democratic societies. European Law Enforcement Research Bulletin 3/12/2020 Research article The 2019 Hong Kong Protests: A Role For Historical Sociology This article responds to Stott et al.’s ‘Patterns of disorder in the 2019 protests in Hong Kong’. In that paper, they offer a social psychological analysis of the Hong Kong events and, in so doing, draw upon the ‘Elaborated Social Identity Model’, and deploy it as the basis for understanding the escalating tensions and violence that occurred through 2019. This model has a number of positive features, not least that it foregrounds rationality and the organized and purposive nature of collective conduct while also paying careful attention to the wider context in which identity within large groups is formed and reformed. The aim in this article is simply to point to the importance of situating such an account within a wider historical sociology, in particular, considering the longer-term ‘life-cycle’ of riot and violent protest. Utilizing Sewell’s notion of ‘events’, the article seeks to point to the ways in which such signal phenomena may be considered to have laid the foundations for at least elements of what occurred subsequently. Such an approach provides a basis within which the growth of Hong Kong’s localism may be situated, as well as offering a longer-term context for understanding the rapidly shifting position occupied by Hong Kong’s police. Policing: A Journal of Policy and Practice - Registration at source 3/12/2020 Research article MI5 and SO15: Collaboration in UK counter-terrorism The recent announcement by the UK Government that a new, world-leading counter-terror operations centre will be opened in London has been widely welcomed, and as Policing Insight’s Andrew Staniforth reports, the collaboration between policing and M15 will be crucial to the success of the ongoing fight against terrorism. Policing Insight - Subscription at source 3/12/2020 Feature, Opinion ‘No issue’ with PPE supply to forces since start of pandemic says chiefs The NPCC dispute claims that PPE supply and distribution to officers has been inadequate, while the Federation says that access has 'improved' despite its morale survey findings. Police Oracle - Subscription at source 3/12/2020 News BTP appoints Met DAC Lucy D’Orsi as new Chief Constable DAC D'Orsi will replace the current police chief Paul Crowther who is due to retire early next year. Police Oracle - Subscription at source 3/12/2020 News IOPC to investigate Norfolk Constabulary death in custody We have begun an independent investigation following the death in custody of a 51-year-old man, who had been arrested in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire. Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) 3/12/2020 News Christmas message from APCC Chair Paddy Tipping Chair of the APCC and PCC for Nottinghamshire wishes everyone a safe Christmas and New Year. Association of Police and Crime Commissioners (APCC) 3/12/2020 News Dozens of drivers fined after detected by police’s new ‘game-changer’ speed camera Drivers are being caught out by new next-generation speed cameras which have been introduced at police forces across the UK. Express 3/12/2020 News Six police forces feature in list of UK’s most inclusive employers Six police forces have been named among the top 50 inclusive employers in the UK in recognition of their continued dedication to workplace diversity. Police Professional 3/12/2020 News Facing the camera GUIDANCE: Good practice and guidance for the police use of overt surveillance camera systems incorporating facial recognition technology to locate persons on a watchlist. Surveillance Camera Commissioner 3/12/2020 Report Surveillance Camera Commissioner releases guidance for police on use of Live Facial Recognition The guidance is for forces to follow when considering the deployment of Live Facial Recognition (LFR) surveillance camera technology. Surveillance Camera Commissioner 3/12/2020 News PSNI apology to 115 people held in stop-and-search error The police have apologised to 115 people - including dissident Republicans - after they were stopped and searched without correct approval. BBC 3/12/2020 News Lucy D’Orsi announced as new British Transport Police chief constable Lucy D’Orsi announced as new British Transport Police chief constable Police Professional 3/12/2020 News Citizens’ Perceptions of Over- and Under-Policing: A Look At Race, Ethnicity, and Community Characteristics While there is substantial research on community-police relations, most studies examine the abstract outcome of “negative perceptions of police.” This study, however, examines over- and under-policing as two distinct, yet not mutually exclusive, constructs, suggesting that there is more to strained police-community relations than citizens perceiving the police “negatively.” Using the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods Community Survey, we assess the relationship between race and ethnicity and perceptions of over- and under-policing and explore how these associations are conditioned by neighborhood characteristics. Results reveal racialized perceptions of over- and underpolicing. Furthermore, while levels of both under- and over-policing vary across neighborhoods, the relationship between these outcomes and individual-level race/ethnicity was robust. Implications for policy and research are discussed. Crime and Delinquency - Registration at source 3/12/2020 Research article Brazil hit by second armed bank raid in 24 hours BRAZIL: Armed men stormed a city in northern Brazil, robbing a bank and killing a hostage, in the second such raid in the country in less than 24 hours. The Times - Subscription at source 3/12/2020 News Police legitimacy: Avoiding hard-power traps in policing When a community’s belief that police will be fair and respectful diminishes, so too does the legitimacy of policing itself, and the result can be slide into broken relations and the ‘harder' use of police powers; criminologist Professor Mike Hough of Birkbeck, University of London explores how procedural justice theory can explain these interactions – and hopefully offer a route back to more effective community relations. Policing Insight - Subscription at source 3/12/2020 Feature, Opinion Review of structures and strategies to prevent, investigate and penalise economic crime and corruption: Report of the Review Group REPUBLIC OF IRELAND: It was a great honour for me to have been requested by the former Minister for Justice and Equality, Deputy Charlie Flanagan, to chair the Review Group on Anti-Fraud and Anti-Corruption, and I now have the pleasure to present this Report to the Minister for Justice, Deputy Helen McEntee. [pdf] Department of Justice (Republic of Ireland) 3/12/2020 Report «304230433044304530463047304830493050Next ›Last » Upcoming events View all events