Effective Policing

Effective Policing

“Evil is powerless if the good are unafraid” President Ronald Regan once said that. Policing in my opinion is the good that is there in the society today. For the good to be effective and to overcome the evil that is spreading like wild fire then the statues and the policing principles guiding the society must be perfect and articulate in order to meet the needs of the pollution and to effectively serve them. Effective policing is the one that serves the public in the most effective ways an continually seeks out and also adopts the proven good practice. In other words it is professional.

Accountability is a wonderful principle. Effective policing is one that holds officers accountable and also upholds state-of the art policies. Policing in other words can be seen as a unique component and primarily in the U.S department of justice, which seeks to prevent or resolve community conflicts and tensions that often arise from actions, other policies and the definite practices of particular systems. The tension and conflicts is often brought about by the actions, the policies and the practices that are perceived to be discriminatory on the basis of race, color or the national origin. (Novak, 2003)

From the above provision, I believe the service or community policing is the effective form of policing. It is has had overreaching success stories in that it seeks to provide services such as conciliation, mediation and the most technical assistance directly to the people and their communities in particular. The main aim of the service policing is to promote nation building, by promoting the principles and the ideals of nondiscrimination. The police department has been seen as a critical unit because, it is a special department that can produce incidents that more often than not escalate into violence. From the above discussion it is evident that community policing is the effective type of policing as it focuses on developing relationships with community members as well as being a highly personal type of policy.

Work Cited.

Novak, Kenneth J., Leanne Fiftal Alarid, and Wayne L. Lucas. “Exploring officers’ acceptance of community policing: Implications for policy implementation.” Journal of Criminal Justice 31.1 (2003): 57-71.

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