Canadian Policing Research Catalogue

Co-producing public safety : communities, law enforcement, and public health researchers work to prevent crime together / by Sarah Schweig, Nazmia E.A. Comrie and John Markovic.

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Canadian Policing Research

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e-Books

Authors

Description

1 online resource (32 pages)

Summary

"Even though crime has decreased across the country since the early 1990s, high rates of violence persist in many neighborhoods. In response, many jurisdictions are seeking ways to understand and prevent violence with a broader multidisciplinary approach, treating violence collaboratively as both a public health issue and a crime problem. A growing number of communities have been adopting this approach. One leading advocate of this method is The California Endowment, whose senior vice president, Anthony Iton, has said, “If you want to change an environment, you have to change many systems.” To identify which systems need changing and the most effective ways to do it, The California Endowment, the Center for Court Innovation, and the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS Office) met in Los Angeles on August 1, 2014. In their roundtable discussion titled “Spreading a Cure for Crime,” law enforcement executives, public health professionals, funders, researchers, and government officials worked together to share information and craft collaborative strategies to prevent crime."--Page 1.

Subject

Online Access

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