Media MonitorSUBSCRIBE 97847 total results. Showing results 64821 to 64840 «323832393240324132423243324432453246Next ›Last » Female perpetrated intimate partner homicide: Indigenous and non-Indigenous offenders AUSTRALIA: The current study was commissioned by the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet to examine the role of offender characteristics, historical circumstances and situational factors in female perpetrated intimate partner homicide, and how these factors may differ between Indigenous and non-Indigenous offenders. [pdf] Australian Institute of Criminology (Australia) 30/1/2020 Report Police are more interested in ‘process’ than crime fighting, says policing minister Police are more interested in process and policies than fighting crime, says the policing minister. The Telegraph 30/1/2020 News Police forces have ‘obsession’ with office processes rather than fighting crime, says Tory Policing minister Police forces have an “obsession” with office processes rather than fighting crime, a senior Tory reckons. The Scottish Sun 30/1/2020 News Funding formula is ‘deeply flawed’, says Surrey PCC Police and Crime Commissioner David Munro has written to the Home Secretary to call for reform to the funding formula Police Oracle - Subscription at source 30/1/2020 News Number of slavery victims in London up tenfold in five years There has been a more than tenfold increase in the number of people identified as victims of modern slavery and human trafficking in London, and more than 30% of all cases nationally are discovered in the capital, according to new research. The Guardian 30/1/2020 News Paddy Tipping, Nottinghamshire PCC at the Police ICT summit Paddy Tipping, PCC for Nottinghamshire, attended this year's Police ICT and National Police Technology Council's Joint Summit, where the National Policing Digital Strategy, approved by PCCs and Police Chiefs, was launched. [video] Association of Police and Crime Commissioners (APCC) 29/1/2020 News Dorset named the ‘heroin capital’ of England and Wales in new report Dorset has been labelled the 'heroin capital' of England and Wales in a shocking new report. Daily Echo (Bournemouth) 29/1/2020 News Use of Taser on man who died in Falmouth was in line with force policy and training The use of Taser on a man who subsequently died in Falmouth was in line with force policy, an Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigation found. Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) 29/1/2020 News Remembering Professor Goldstein Geoff Coliandris looks at the work of the pioneer of Problem-Oriented Policing and the importance of police approaches over officer numbers. Police Professional - Subscription at source 29/1/2020 Analysis, Feature IOPC updates Federation roads policing conference With deaths from police-related traffic incidents rising, the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) today (29 January) shared learning and our work to boost in-house expertise at the Police Federation of England and Wales annual Roads Policing Conference. Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) 29/1/2020 News Stephen Mold, Northamptonshire PFCC at this year’s Police ICT Summit Stephen Mold, Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner for Northamptonshire and Chair of the Police ICT Company Board, hosted Day One of this year's Police ICT Company and National Police Technology Council's Joint Summit: Delivering Change At Pace In A Digitally Disrupted Age. [video] Association of Police and Crime Commissioners (APCC) 29/1/2020 News South Wales Police officers praised for handling of mental health incident in Swansea The actions of two South Wales Police officers in disarming a man with mental health issues who was stabbing himself in a bathroom have been commended by an Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigation. Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) 29/1/2020 News Smart Motorways panel unanimously condemns dangerous motorways The panel, moderated by the Police Federation's Head of Communications Martin Buhagiar, began with a written statement from Highways England, who declined to attend the conference. Police Federation of England and Wales (PFEW) 29/1/2020 News Change has never been this fast, yet it will never be this slow again Artificial Intelligence. Augmented reality. Big data. Predictive analytics. Blockchain. Internet of Things. Policing today is confronted with an ever-expanding array of digital disruption, some offering opportunity and others threatening challenge for the service. National Enabling Programmes 29/1/2020 Feature, Opinion APCC Chief Executive Susannah Hancock, at this years Police ICT summit Susannah Hancock, Chief Executive of the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners attended this year's Police ICT Company and National Police Technology Council's Joint Summit: Delivering Change At Pace In A Digitally Disrupted Age Association of Police and Crime Commissioners (APCC) 29/1/2020 News Roads Policing 2020: Successful and thought-provoking conference Police driver legislation, the role of the roads policing officer and safety concerns around Smart Motorways, were key topics at the Federation's 14th annual Roads Policing Conference. Police Federation of England and Wales (PFEW) 29/1/2020 News U.K. Police will soon be able to search through U.S. data without asking a judge Law enforcement officials in the U.S. and U.K. have negotiated a deal that sells out the privacy rights of the public in both nations. For Americans, it will effectively abrogate Fourth Amendment protections, and subject their data to search and seizure by foreign police. Electronic Frontier Foundation 29/1/2020 News Police across the UK pay undercover informants more than £13million in five years The Metropolitan Police and Police Scotland were the two highest spending forces over the last five years when it came paying informants for information about criminals Mirror 29/1/2020 News “You’d Just Cop Flak From Every Other Dickhead Under the Sun”: Navigating the Tensions of (in)visibility and Hypervisibility in Lgbti Police Liaison Programs in Three Australian States This article examines the different ways that lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) police liaison officers in three states of Australia conceptualized and problematized the public visibility of LGBTI police liaison services. In a climate where LGBTI police liaison services are a prominent model for building relationships between police and LGBTI people, this article considers, through interview data with LGBTI police liaison officers, these officers’ perceptions of the role that the visibility of these programs played in their success. Specifically, it explores the tensions and difficulties for officers and LGBTI communities resulting from the general invisibility of liaison officers themselves (and, by extension, these programs), as well as the problems that increased visibility of these programs might bring to officers, to LGBTI communities, and to policing work itself. Although enhancing the visibility of liaison services may be an important goal, this research suggests that careful consideration is required regarding how this visibility is produced and maintained, particularly given the concerns that officers reported about the potential risks posed by adopting new forms of visibility, including the risk of hypervisibility. This article questions the conventional view that increased visibility is unproblematic and is the key to the success of such programs. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice 29/1/2020 Research article Policing set for renewed scrutiny by MPs Labour MP and former Cabinet minister Yvette Cooper has been reconfirmed as Chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee. Police Oracle - Subscription at source 29/1/2020 News «323832393240324132423243324432453246Next ›Last » Upcoming events View all events