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Results for smart policing initiative

2 results found

Author: White, Michael D.

Title: Challenges in Implementation and Impact: Lessons from the Cincinnati, Joliet, and Lansing Smart Policing Initiatives

Summary: Since 2009, the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) has provided more than $14.4 million to 35 local, county, and state law enforcement agencies conducting 38 Smart Policing Initiative (SPI) projects. Though many SPI sites have documented significant crime decreases in the targeted areas with sound research methodologies, others have been less successful. The reasons why some SPI sites have struggled are varied and include implementation problems, data analysis issues, and leadership turnover. Other sites have implemented evidence-based strategies and evaluated those strategies with rigorous research methodologies; but in the end, crime reductions were not realized. We consider such initiatives successful because they identify strategies, practices, and lessons that other jurisdictions can learn from, and they are evidence-based because of the strong research designs they employed. This SPI spotlight reviews the experiences of three sites - Cincinnati (OH), Joliet (IL), and Lansing (MI) - that fall into this last category. All three sites were led by police officials and criminal justice scholars who were well-versed in evidence-based practices and researcher/practitioner partnerships. Each site engaged in intensive data analysis to examine the underlying conditions and causes of the targeted crime problem (robbery in Cincinnati, drug dealing in Lansing, and gun violence in Joliet). Each site implemented a comprehensive, collaborative data-driven strategy to address their respective crime problems, from interventions based on the problem analysis triangle in Cincinnati and hot spots in Joliet, to focused deterrence and offender call-ins in Lansing. Each project was evaluated using rigorous quasi-experimental research designs. Despite these ingredients for success, none of the three sites experienced statistically significant crime declines that could be tied to their SPI. This spotlight identifies a number of common challenges to implementation and impact that were experienced by the three sites, including: lapses in continuous, real-time problem analysis; insufficient program dosage; stakeholder limitations; and tension between operational decision-making and research design integrity. In Cincinnati, for example, geographic analysis of the robbery problem led the SPI team to increase the size of the original target area, which necessarily weakened the intensity of the intervention. In Joliet, probation and parole officers were active participants in the SPI, but restrictions on their authority limited the team's ability to conduct compliance checks and to initiate revocation proceedings. In Lansing, the nature of drug dealing shifted from a traditional turf-based model to mobile transactions coordinated through cell phones, which forced the SPI team to alter their interventions "on the fly." These experiences (and others) in Cincinnati, Joliet, and Lansing highlight the importance of devising a strong process evaluation that allows for detailed documentation of implementation processes and challenges, and for a thorough understanding of why a program did or did not produce the intended crime reduction benefits. The Cincinnati, Joliet, and Lansing SPIs also underscore the importance of thinking broadly about program impact. Impact can be measured in terms of knowledge gained, organizational change, and new partnerships - developments that are not easily quantified in terms of statistical significance but represent positive change in a law enforcement agency.

Details: Washington, DC: CNA Analysis and Solutions, 2015. 23p.

Source: Internet Resource: Spotlight Report: Accessed September 25, 2015 at: http://www.smartpolicinginitiative.com/sites/all/files/SPI%20Challenges%20Spotlight%202015%20Final.pdf

Year: 2015

Country: United States

URL: http://www.smartpolicinginitiative.com/sites/all/files/SPI%20Challenges%20Spotlight%202015%20Final.pdf

Shelf Number: 136876

Keywords:
Evidence-Based Practices
Focused Deterrence
Hot Spots
Police Reform
Smart Policing Initiative

Author: Uchida, Craig D.

Title: The RASOR's Edge: Focused Deterrence in Cambridge, Everett, and Somerville

Summary: The Smart Policing Initiative (SPI) is a national program funded by the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). SPI is based on a combination of three components: evidence-based, data-driven, and problem oriented policing. For three Massachusetts police agencies -- Cambridge, Everett, and Somerville – this translated into a focused deterrence initiative. The purpose of focused deterrence is to discourage criminal behavior by maintaining direct communication and contact with chronic offenders. Law enforcement personnel engage these individuals to inform them about their negative impact on the community and then provide alternative approaches and innovative efforts to combat the social harm they cause. To further cultivate relationships with the offenders, social service agencies provide community resources to match the prevention efforts by law enforcement. However, if the offender fails to comply with the prevention efforts made on his or her behalf, law enforcement has the authority to administer punitive sanctions. Led by the Cambridge Police Department, the three agencies established RASOR (pronounced razor) - Regional Analytics for the Safety of Our Residents.

Details: Cambridge, MA: Justice and Security Strategies, Inc., 2016. 20p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed December 17, 2018 at: http://www.strategiesforpolicinginnovation.com/sites/default/files/JSS%20Cambridge%20SPI%20Final%20Evaluation%20Report.pdf

Year: 2016

Country: United States

URL: http://www.strategiesforpolicinginnovation.com/sites/default/files/JSS%20Cambridge%20SPI%20Final%20Evaluation%20Report.pdf

Shelf Number: 153875

Keywords:
Cambridge Police Department
Chronic Offenders
Community Initiatives
Data-driven
Deterrence
Evidence-Based Approach
Focused Deterrence
Law Enforcement
Massachusetts
Problem Oriented Policing
Regional Analytics for the Safety of Our Residents
Smart Policing Initiative