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Private Policing: The Major Issues (From Private Prisons and Police: Recent Australian Trends, P 281-294, 1994, Paul Moyle, ed. - See NCJ-160698)

NCJ Number
160710
Author(s)
P Wilson; D Keogh; R Lincoln
Date Published
1994
Length
14 pages
Annotation
The social, economic, and political factors that have resulted in the increase in the private security industry in Australia are analyzed; regulatory requirements and issues for the future are also examined.
Abstract
Increases in crime rates and the fear of crime that has accompanied them have created a setting in which the private security industry has been able to expand exponentially. Although documented data are scarce, the private security industry has clearly become increasingly powerful. Nevertheless, it remains largely unregulated and unaccountable. Currently, the industry and some of its critics generally favor self-regulation with varying degrees of government oversight. Despite the debate about how a regulatory organization will be structured, regulation is clearly needed to provide standardized training programs and to ensure quality of service. Issues for the future include efficiencies, evaluation, accountability, the use of force, public access, standards, and fee setting. 28 references (Author abstract modified)

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