POLICE INNOVATIONS, 'SECRET SQUIRRELS' AND ACCOUNTABILITY: EMPIRICALLY STUDYING INTELLIGENCE-LED POLICING IN CANADA

In an environment of fiscal constraint and growing fear of catastrophic events, police services are turning to intelligence and analytic technologies to conduct aggressive information gathering and risk analysis. The present study uses 86 in-depth interviews and participant observation to explore th...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of criminology 2015-07, Vol.55 (4), p.711-729
Hauptverfasser: Sanders, Carrie B., Weston, Crystal, Schott, Nicole
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container_issue 4
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container_title British journal of criminology
container_volume 55
creator Sanders, Carrie B.
Weston, Crystal
Schott, Nicole
description In an environment of fiscal constraint and growing fear of catastrophic events, police services are turning to intelligence and analytic technologies to conduct aggressive information gathering and risk analysis. The present study uses 86 in-depth interviews and participant observation to explore the integration and utilization of intelligence-led policing (ILP) in a Canadian context. From this analysis, we identify how police cultures, organizational context and situational pace of policing constrain an intelligence-led framework. Further, we illustrate how police services have rhetorically adopted ILP and translated it to mean accountability in a time of austerity. By translating ILP, Canadian police services have been able to redefine success within their services without necessarily attending to the outcomes of their practices.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/bjc/azv008
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source HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Sociological Abstracts; Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current)
subjects Accountability
Canada
Empirical research
Innovation
Intelligence
Interviews
Police
Police officers
Policing
Risk
Secrecy
Security
title POLICE INNOVATIONS, 'SECRET SQUIRRELS' AND ACCOUNTABILITY: EMPIRICALLY STUDYING INTELLIGENCE-LED POLICING IN CANADA
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