NCJ Number
104417
Journal
Crime and Delinquency Volume: 33 Issue: 1 Dated: (January 1987) Pages: 31-52
Date Published
1987
Length
22 pages
Annotation
Current police practice is dominated by two, competing strategies -- 'community policing' and 'crime control policing.'
Abstract
Both are limited: they each apply a standard set of police tactics to a wide variety of differing circumstances; they focus on incidents, rather than the underlying problems which cause these incidents. Recently, two police departments have developed an alternative. Through 'problem-oriented policing,' officers focus on these underlying causes. They collect information from numerous sources, and enlist the support of a wide variety of public and private agencies and individuals in their attempts to solve problems. Case studies in these departments show that use of the problem-oriented approach can substantially reduce crime and fear. In the long run, problem-oriented policing will require changes in management structure, the role of the police in the community and the city bureaucracy, and the limits of police authority. (Author abstract)