Community Policing

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CONCEPTIAL MEANING AND LEGAL FRAME WORK OFCOMMUNITY POLICING.
2.0 Introduction
This chapter examines the philosophical aspect of Community policing and the legal power of police Officers and Citizens in the prevention of crimes. In that regard, the chapter looks at the way abuse of power by police officers, weakens the law establishing a police force on policing and the response of citizens on policing .
2.1 Meaning of community policing.
Community policing is a broad strategy that has been adopted by many police forces around the world. Rather than merely responding to crimes after they occur, the strategy involves the taking a proactive approach to the problems police officers encounter in their day to day duties while also strengthening …show more content…

The diversity of definitions offered by these actors may be explained by the individual's own perception of the concept and the philosophy of the community policing. The individuals at the top of the police bureaucracy understood the academic definitions as well as the street level reality of the concept. Many street level officers felt that community policing meant social work and non- law enforcement type duties and responsibilities. The philosophy of community policing contains critical assumption and ideologies about the nature of the police department. However, it’s important to say that the word community brings to the mind to many people it conjures up images of either their home town, to others it may bring images of specific block, a neighborhood or an idyllic small town where everyone knows everyone and they get …show more content…

The definition of community has evolved to take into account the changing nature of communities themselves. In the past, defining community seemed simpler because a sense of community was based on peoples who shared interests and interdependence, which typically overlapped. Thus, today, technological, economic and communicative changes have all had a dramatic impact on community life and have altered the very nature of modern communities . Nevertheless, Community is a process where community members come together to take collective action and generate solutions to common problems. Community wellbeing (economic, social, environmental and cultural) often evolves from this type of collective action being taken at a grassroots level. Community development ranges from small initiatives within a small group of large initiatives that involve the broader community
According to Kelling (1994), points out that whether one calls community policing a philosophy, a strategy, a model or a paradigm, it is a complex set of ideas that simply cannot be put into a simple one sentence definition, but it satisfies two vital components which are a problem solving approach to crime disorder and partnership, involving both the police and the community in solving

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