This study examines police responses to people experiencing homelessness.
This work demonstrates that many police departments are innovative in their responses to people experiencing homelessness. Using open-source (i.e., social media) data collection complemented by in-depth case studies, this study presents a typology of police responses to homelessness across the United States. The researchers identified eight categories of discretionary police responses to homelessness. For several of the categories, the researchers identified subcategories. The authors present and define each category in the typology and provide open-source examples for each discretionary response. The majority of responses are steeped in discretion and must be tailored to the local context. While novel, this research can be used as a foundational resource to help guide law enforcement agencies in responding to people experiencing homelessness. It also lays the groundwork for future evaluation efforts that are needed to determine which police responses to homelessness produce positive outcomes or meet specified goals and which do not. (Published Abstract Provided)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- To activate, or not to activate? Officers’ decisions to turn on body-worn cameras during different police services
- 2023 Annual Report: The Rural Violent Crime Reduction Initiative Microgrant Program
- Factors that Facilitate and Hinder Implementation of a Problem Oriented Policing Intervention in Crime Hot Spots: Suggestions to Improve Implementation Based on a Field Experiment