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Knowledge management in policing [electronic resource] / by T. Dave Chavez, Michael R. Pendleton, and Jim Bueerman.

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Location

Canadian Policing Research

Resource

e-Books

Authors

Bibliography

Includes bibliographical references.

Description

1 online resource (iii, 116 p.)

Note

"Research papers ... produced under grant number 1999CKW0097 awarded to the Seattle Police Dept. by the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) as part of the COPS Office of Program, Policy, Support & Evaluation (PPSE) Division Fellowship Program, U.S. Dept. of Justice (DOJ)."
Description based on print version record.

Summary

As used in these articles, "knowledge management" refers to activities that identify and apply the intellectual assets of employees, databases, and expertise derived from doing a specific job over time. The author of the first article studied KM in policing, using a literature review, field observations and interviews, secondary data analysis, and case study analysis. The study found that although police were not familiar with the KM concept, they were engaged in some of its activities in the course of solving problems. Having become informed of the concept by the author/researcher, police managers adopted a more conscious and structured effort to manage the knowledge resources of their agency. The second article reports on a case study of the Redlands Police Department that examined innovation leadership. The findings indicate that the police innovator is more than an individual who is intrigued with new ideas, but rather involves facilitating the development of an organization in which knowledge is constantly tapped to produce innovative approaches to the organizational mission. The third article presents 12 guidelines for adopting and implementing KM as an organizational development and management strategy designed to foster innovation in a police organization. These include adopting and promoting an organizational mission and values that facilitate KM; practicing and promoting innovation leadership centered on KM; restructuring the department to facilitate KM; conducting a knowledge inventory and establishing a knowledge repository; understanding, promoting, and accommodating the protocols for accessing data and knowledge; and structuring police knowledge into policy, organizational, and tactical packages to promote meaning and use.

Subject

Online Access

Contents

1. On the threshold of an innovation: police and the management of knowledge / Michael R. Pendleton. -- 2. Anatomy of a police innovator: a case study of knowledge management in policing / Michael R. Pendleton & Jim Bueerman. -- 3. Creating an innovation-centric police department: guidelines knowledge management in policing / Michael R. Pendleton & T. Dave Chavez. -- Appendix. Understanding police management: a methodological note on the outcomes of a police research journey / Michael R. Pendleton.

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