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- catalog abstract "This report provides an examination of team policing approaches in seven cities, analyzing problems experienced in planning, implementation, and evaluation. The concept of team policing is generally intended to strike a new balance between the needs for police centralization for efficiency and community needs for police decentralization in order to increase responsiveness to the problems of citizens. In theory, team policing calls for reorganization of the patrol force to include one or more quasi-autonomous teams, with a joint purpose of improving total police services to a particular neighborhood and increasing job satisfaction of the patrol officers. This study examines team policing as it was experienced in seven cities -- Holyoke, Massachusetts, Richmond, California, Dayton, Syracuse, Detroit, los angels, and New York City. Some preliminary indications are given of why team policing has worked better in some cities than in others. The reports, which are subjective accounts by eye-witness researchers, contain a brief background of the city and the department and a description of that particular team program, pinpointing individual successes and shortcomings.".
- catalog contributor b4941259.
- catalog contributor b4941260.
- catalog contributor b4941261.
- catalog contributor b4941262.
- catalog contributor b4941263.
- catalog created "[1973]".
- catalog date "1973".
- catalog date "[1973]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[1973]".
- catalog description "Acknowledgments -- Foreword / James Q. Wilson -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Elements of team policing -- Chapter 2. Case studies -- Chapter 3. Preparation for team policing : goals, plans and training -- Chapter 4. Team policing on the street -- Chapter 5. Obstacles to team policing -- Chapter 6. Evaluations -- Chapter 7. Summary and conclusions.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references.".
- catalog description "This report provides an examination of team policing approaches in seven cities, analyzing problems experienced in planning, implementation, and evaluation. The concept of team policing is generally intended to strike a new balance between the needs for police centralization for efficiency and community needs for police decentralization in order to increase responsiveness to the problems of citizens. In theory, team policing calls for reorganization of the patrol force to include one or more quasi-autonomous teams, with a joint purpose of improving total police services to a particular neighborhood and increasing job satisfaction of the patrol officers. This study examines team policing as it was experienced in seven cities -- Holyoke, Massachusetts, Richmond, California, Dayton, Syracuse, Detroit, los angels, and New York City. Some preliminary indications are given of why team policing has worked better in some cities than in others. The reports, which are subjective accounts by eye-witness researchers, contain a brief background of the city and the department and a description of that particular team program, pinpointing individual successes and shortcomings.".
- catalog extent "xvii, 108 p.".
- catalog issued "1973".
- catalog issued "[1973]".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Washington, Police Foundation".
- catalog spatial "United States".
- catalog subject "363.2/3".
- catalog subject "HV8080.P2 S53".
- catalog subject "Team policing United States Case studies.".
- catalog subject "Team policing.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Acknowledgments -- Foreword / James Q. Wilson -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Elements of team policing -- Chapter 2. Case studies -- Chapter 3. Preparation for team policing : goals, plans and training -- Chapter 4. Team policing on the street -- Chapter 5. Obstacles to team policing -- Chapter 6. Evaluations -- Chapter 7. Summary and conclusions.".
- catalog title "Team policing: seven case studies. Principal authors: Lawrence W. Sherman, Catherine H. Milton, and Thomas V. Kelly. Contributing authors: Thomas F. McBride, Susan Michaelson, and Robert Wasserman. Foreword by James Q. Wilson.".
- catalog type "Case studies. fast".
- catalog type "text".