LEA 2 Module
LEA 2 Module
A Module in
LEA 2-Comparative Models and Policing
Compiled by:
LAURENCE P. BAZAN-DEAN CCJE
EDUARD JAN E. PLAZA, RCrim, J.D.
TERESITO O. DELOS ARCOS, Jr., RCrim
CARL IAN E. CLAPERO, RCrim.
IRINE L. RIVERA, RCrim.
ARNEL S. VIRTUDAZO
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Chapter 1
It defined as the science and art of investigating and comparing the police system of
nations. It covers also the study of police organizations, trainings and methods of policing of
various nations.
It is the Process of outlining the similarities and differences of one police system to
another in order to discover insights in the field of international policing. It is also the subfield of
the study of Criminal Justice that compares justice system worldwide. Such study can take a
descriptive, historical, or political approach.
Moreover, it studies the similarities and differences in structure, goals, punishment and
emphasis on rights as well as the history and political stature of different systems.
It involves the study and description of one’s country law, criminal procedure, or justice.
Comparative criminal justice system attempts to build on the knowledge of criminal justice in one
country by investigating and evaluating, in terms of another country, culture or institution.
TRANSNATIONAL CRIME
It is a term that has been used in comparative and internationals criminal justice study in
recent years to reflect the complexity and enormity of global issues.
It is defined by the United Nations (UN) offences whose inception, proportion and or direct
or indirect effects involve in more than one country.
1. Money Laundering
2. Drug Trafficking
3. Terrorism
4. Human Trafficking
5. Cyber crimes
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INTERNATIONAL CRIMES
According to Harry Damner there are many reasons why we need to compare but the
basic reasons are:
GLOBALIZATION
It is the intensification of worldwide social relations which link distant localities in such a
way that local happenings are shaped by events occurring many miles away and vice versa.
It is argued that atleast five broad definitions of globalization can be found in the
literature;
1. Globalization as Internationalization
It describes the growth in international exchange and interdependence. With
growing flows of trade and capital investment there is the possibility of moving beyond
and inter-national economy in which, distinct national economies are subsumed and
rearticulated into the system by international process and transactions.
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2. Globalization as Liberation
3. Globalization as Universalization
5. Globalization as deterritorialization
CYBERCRIME
It covers many types of activities but essentially can be used to describe violations of
law that are committed and or facilitated through the use of electronic media.
In Comparison with ordinary crime, cybercrime requires few resources relative to the
damage that can be caused, it can be committed in a jurisdiction without the offender being
physically present in it and in many countries, offences are inadequately defined or not defined
at all; hence, personal risk and the likelihood of detection are low.
Organized Criminality has become more transnational and has been restructured and
decentralized; in other words, it too has globalized.
Transnational Criminals do not respect borders in that, in carrying out their activities, they
trail their activities across several jurisdictions to minimize law enforcement risk and maximize
profits.
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Drug traffickers use computers and electronic pocket organizers for storing
information such as bank accounts numbers, contact details of associates, databases of
assets and financial activity, sales and other business records, grid coordinates of
clandestine landing strips and recipes for synthetic drug manufacture and for electronic
mail and other correspondence.
1. Opportunities for all forms of crime may increase as online communications, finance and
commerce expand. The growth and interdependence of national economies will make it easier
for criminal organization to blend their operation into legitimate economic activity.
2. Transnational Crime may increase as networks make cross-border crime easier to commit.
3. Organized crime may continue to exploit technological advances for offensive and defensive
purposes. The “IT Warrior” will become an indispensable component of organized criminal group.
4. Electronic money-laundering may increase with the growth of online financial service
companies, especially if measures against money-laundering remain a low priority and if offshore
companies continue to offer anonymity and protection from investigation. Underground banking
systems will also enjoy greater security through the use of information technology.
5. Drug-related crime may expand such crime will be committed by a larger number of people,
many of whom will not be members of organized criminal groups, nor will they fit to any criminal
profile;
6. Minor may increasingly commit crimes involving information technology as new generations
achieve computer literacy at an early age.
7. Criminal Organizations may exploit scientific developments in order to invest more heavily in
production of synthetic drugs for the illicit market.
8. Law Enforcement may have less capacity to conduct interception and surveillance activities as
drug trafficking organizations increasingly adopt encryption and other means of concealment.
9. Jurisdictions without adequate laws against crime involving information technology may
become sanctuaries;
10. Traditional frameworks for extradition and mutual legal assistance may be stretched to their
limits.
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1. PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
Those who engaged in terrorism may do so for purely personal reasons, based
on their own psychological state of mind. Their motivation may be nothing more than
hate or the desire for power.
2. IDEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
Ideology defined as beliefs, values and or principles by which a group identifies
its particular aims and goals. Ideology may encompass religion or political philosophies
and programs.
3. STRATEGIC PERSPECTIVE
Terrorism is sometimes seen as a logical extension of the failure of politics. When
people seek redress of their grievances through government, but fail to win governments
attention to their plight, they may resort to violence.
From this viewpoint, terrorism is the result of logical analysis of the goals and
objectives of a group, and their estimate of the likelihood of gaining victory. If victory
seems unlikely using more tradition means of opposition, then one might calculate that
terrorism is a better option.
For Centuries, people have left their homes in search of better lives elsewhere. In the last
decade, the process of globalization has caused an unprecedented amount of migration from the
least developed co8ntries of Asia, Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe to Western Europe,
Australia and North America.
Economic instability appears to the main reason for illegal migration. People smuggling
syndicate are drawn by the huge profits that can be made, while benefiting from weak legislation
and the relatively low risk of detection, prosecution and arrest compared to other activities of
transnational organized crime.
People smuggling implies the procurement for financial or material gain, of the illegal entry
into a state of which that person is neither a citizen nor a permanent resident
Distinction:
PEOPLE SMUGGLING
It is an individual who pay a smuggler in order to gain illegal entry to a country to
do so voluntarily.
HUMAN TRAFFICKING
It is an individual or victim are often duped or forced into entering another country.
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In principle, the relationship between smuggler and migrants ends once the individuals
arrive in the new country. However, there is evidence that people smugglers continue to exploit
illegal migrants, through threats and demands for additional fees.
One of today’s biggest human rights crises is the international trafficking ow women and
girls to a lesser extent boys) into sex slavery. Human trafficking is the third largest criminal industry
in the world, outranked only by arms and drug dealing. The United Nations estimates that
trafficking in persons generates $7 to $10 billion annually for traffickers.
The number of people trafficked each year estimated by most experts to be in the millions.
Given its current growth low investigation rate and low prosecution rate, human trafficking is
expected by some to take over drug trafficking as the second largest criminal industry in the world
within the next decade.
Traffickers acquire their victims primarily from developing countries where poverty is
rampant, commonly through some means of force or deception. Victims are typically very young,
most ranging in age from eight to 18 y ears old.
A common scenario involves a poor Asian or Eastern European girl who is offered a better
life as housemaid, restaurant server or dancer in a wealthy country such as United States, Great
Britain or Italy.
When she arrives at her destination, her passport is taken away, she is physically and
sexually abused, and she is forced into prostitution in a country where she neither speaks the
language nor has any friends, relatives of means of support.
She is forced to service 8-15 clients a day and does not receive any pay. Rather the money
is used to pay off her debt to the trafficker and brothel owners for the transportation, food, lodging
and so on. After some period of time, she will be resold to another brother owner, often in another
country, and the cycle will continue all over again.
She is likely to acquire HIV/AIDS, and to pass it on to their clients and their wives, all
around the world. She has a greater chance than most of during early, and is certain to live a
horrible existence in whatever short years she has. Even if she is eventually rescued and
repatriated to her country and community, she is likely to be ostracize as a result of their
involvement in prostitution.
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Global Implications
2. Threats to human health, through the spread of HIV/AIDS and other STDs to the
victims, their clients, their client’s wives and so on;
3. Threats to national and international security, since it is believed that mania of the
worlds major sex traffickers is connected to organized crime groups, which may then
use the proceeds to fund other criminal activities such as terrorism;
4. Threats to the very health of our global human conscience, since slavery-often proudly
touted as having been wiped out in the 19 th century is actually alive and well, right in all
of our own backyards.
How can the police or law enforcement agencies safeguard life and human dignity in a
global scale?
The system and norms are codified in a widely endorsed set of international undertakings:
4. Protections for vulnerable groups such as the UN Convention on the Rights of the
Child and the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women;
6. Security rights encompass life, bodily integrity, liberty and sometimes associated
rights of political participation and democratic governance.
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Economic, social and cultural rights are broad category of human rights
guaranteed in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and
other legally binding international and regional human rights treaties.
They include:
b. The right to education, including insuring that primary education free and
compulsory, that education is sufficiently available, accessible, acceptable and
adapted to the individual.
d. The right to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health,
including the right to healthy living conditions and available, accessible,
acceptable and quality health services.
f. The right to food, including the right to freedom from hunger an access at all
times to adulate nutritious food or the means to obtain it.
g. The right to water- the right to sufficient water and sanitation that is available,
accessible both physically and economically and safe.
1. Asia
2. Australia
3. Africa
4. Antarctica
5. North America
6. South America
7. Europe
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Facts:
Some consider the North and South American continent to be just one landmass referred to as
the “American Continent.” Europe and Asia continent are also combined at times and referred to
as “Eurasia.”
The continent of Australia is often confused with the country of Australia. The Australian Continent
includes Australia (country), Tasmania, New Guinea and others. This region is also referred to as
“Oceania,” which includes the previously listed countries as well as New Zealand, Micronesian,
and Polynesian islands. Oceania is generally not considered a continent as it does not make up
“a single continuous landmass.”
5 Continents:
Depending on when you went through school and the country you were educated, you may have
learned that there were just 5 continents. Africa, America, Asia, Australia, and Europe.
Interestingly, this is why we have five rings to symbolize the Olympic Games.
6 Continents:
In certain countries it is common for students to learn about just 6 continents. America, Antarctica,
Asia, Africa, Australia (Oceania), and Europe. There are some geography experts that
acknowledge just 6 continents where the continent of Asia and Europe are combined into a new
continent called “Eurasia” as these two continents are one single land mass.
7 Continents:
The most commonly accepted number of continents is 7. North America, South America, Africa,
Antarctica, Australia (Oceania), Europe, and Asia.
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Chapter 2
1. ANARCHY or ANARCHISM
A society free from coercive authority of any kind is the goal of proponents of the
political philosophy of anarchism. Legitimacy of a state is gained through consent, not
through coercion. Common sense would allow people to come together to form a
functional society allowing to develop their own sense of morality, ethics or principled
behavior (Garcia, 2010).
With the idea of freedom as being base upon political and economic self-rule. This
occurred alongside the rise of the nation-state and large-scale industrial capitalism or
state-sponsored corporatism, and the corruption that came with their success.
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2. ARISTOCRACY
2. Rigged election
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3. AUTHORITARIAN
(3) neither "intensive nor extensive political mobilization" and constraints on the
mass public (such as repressive tactics against opponents and a prohibition of anti-regime
activity) and
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Totalitarianism- It is a political system in which the state holds total control over
the society and seeks to control all aspects of public and private life wherever possible.
Totalitarianism Authoritarianism
Charisma (Charm) High Low
Role Conception Leader as function Leader as individual
Ends of power Public Private
Corruption Low High
Official Ideology Yes No
Limited Pluralism No Yes
Legitimacy Yes No
4. AUTOCRACY
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5. COMMUNIST STATE
1. Marxism
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2. Leninism
"We want to achieve a new and better order of society: in this new and better
society there must be neither rich nor poor; all will have to work. Not a handful of rich
people, but all the working people must enjoy the fruits of their common labour. Machines
and other improvements must serve to ease the work of all and not to enable a few to
grow rich at the expense of millions and tens of millions of people. This new and better
society is called socialist society. The teachings about this society are called 'socialism'."
3. Marxist- Leninists-
He was the leader of the Soviet Union (Now Russia) from the mid-1920s until his
death in 1953. Holding the post of the General secretary of the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union, he was effectively the dictator of the state.
The state and the Communist Party claim to act in accordance with the wishes of
the industrial working class
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Researchers who attempted to count the number of people killed under Stalin's
regime produced estimates ranging from 3 to 60 million.
Stalin intended to use the starvation as a cheap and efficient means (as opposed
to deportations and shootings) to kill off those deemed to be "counterrevolutionaries
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4. MAOISM
Mao claimed that instead of the peasants being a revolutionary class, hand in
hand with their industrial working "comrades", they were the revolutionary class
The state and the party to act in accordance to the peasantry (farmers).
Maoism provided the CPC's first comprehensive theoretical guideline with regards
to how to continue socialist revolution, the creation of a socialist society, socialist military
construction, and highlights various contradictions in society to be addressed by what is
termed "socialist construction".
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5. JUCHE
- a variant of Marxism-Leninism
On the basis of Juche (idea), the leader gave a profound explanation of the
theories, strategies and tactics of national liberation, class emancipation and human
liberations in our era. Thus, it can be said that the revolutionary theory of Kimilsungism is
a perfect revolutionary theory of Communism in the era.
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Hammer, Sickle, red star, Red Flag and Face of Che Guevarra
2. The sickle represents the agricultural workers; together the hammer and
sickle represent the unity of these two groups
3. The red flag has had multiple meanings in history, but it was first used
as a flag of defiance (rebellion).
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6. CORPORATOCRACY
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7. DEMARCHY
It was first proposed by the Australian philosopher John Burnheim, whose political
model removed the need for the state or bureaucracies.
It was first proposed by the Australian philosopher John Burnheim, whose political
model removed the need for the state or bureaucracies. Randomly selected groups,
sometimes termed “policy juries”, “citizens juries” or “consensus conferences” would
deliberately make decisions about public order policies in much the same way that juries
reach verdicts on criminal cases. According to him, random selection of policymakers
would make it easier for everyday citizens to meaningfully participate and harder for
special interest to corrupts the process.
8. DIRECT DEMOCRACY
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This assembly might pass executive motion, make laws, elect and dismiss
officials and conduct trials.
Depending on the particular system in use, direct democracy might entail passing
executive decisions, the use of sortition, making laws, directly electing or dismissing
officials and conducting trials.
a. PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY
Greek word:
Demos and Kratos- which imply that the people are in power and relies on
the participation of its citizens.
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No one has yet discovered how to link such a style to the national decision-making process
or how to make this effective on a large scale.
b. DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY
Deliberative democracy or discursive
democracy is a form of democracy in which
deliberation is central to decision-making.
It adopts elements of both consensus
decision-making and majority rule.
2. Substantive balance: Different positions are compared based on their supporting evidence.
3. Diversity: All major positions relevant to the matter at hand and held by the public are
considered.
5. Equal consideration: Views are weighed based on evidence, not on who is advocating a
particular view.
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9. GRASSROOTS DEMOCRACY
They believe that they have the mandate to act in a way they see fair as
long as they hold regular election.
They ruler may centralize power between branches and local government. Media
is often controlled by the state and strongly support the regime. Non-governmental
organization (NGO) may face onerous regulations or simply prohibited.
The regime may used red tape, economic pressure, or violence against critics.
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- Constitutional Democracy
The term also implies the hypocrisy of democracy by force doctrines, which
despites assuming the full rhetoric and stature of a self-appointed savior. But can only
loosely or indirectly allude to the principles of messianic guidance and peace.
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Is a system of representative
government or organization such that
universal and periodic elections take
place without reference to political
parties.
In many nations, the head of state is nonpartisan, even if the prime minister and
parliament are chosen in partisan election.
The heads of state are expected to remain neutral with regards to partisan politics.
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Major criticism of religious democracy include criticism from the secular and the
legalist points of view:
Separation of religion and state is required to protect freedom and ensure equality. As
many countries, including the United States incorporate religion into their legislation, it could be
argued as to what constitutes a secular democracy.
Anything outside of rigid interpretation of religious texts is rejected and God rather than
the people is sovereign.
Representatives are elected by the public, as in national elections for the national
legislature.
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One of the key principals is free and open debate prior to casting a vote.
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1. the workers of a city elect their local soviet. This body holds both legislative
and executive power for that city.
2. The local soviet choose their delegates for their county soviet.
3. These county soviets in turn elect for their provincial soviet.
4. Lastly, the provincial then choose their delegates for the regional soviet.
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RED - USSR
BLUE - Russia
Other Color - Other Countries gained independence
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It is said to maximize its control over the lives of its citizens, using the dual
rationale of general will (i.e., "public good") and majority rule.
Totalitarianism- It is a political system in which the state holds total control over
the society and seeks to control all aspects of public and private life wherever possible.
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WORLD ECONOMY
The world economy shows that economic development and wellbeing are linked to
freedom and democracy. This correlation is the key that explains our world society.
The following is a list of twenty largest economies by GDP (PPP) at a specific year
according to International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
As of March 2020
-is the sum of the entire final production obtained in a given year by a country and it
measures the economic power of a given country.
-is an economic theory that states that the exchange rate between two countries is equal
to the ratio of the currencies' respective purchasing power.
According to World Bank, the world economy is divided into the following income
groups:
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Chapter 3
Philippines Japan
1. Law Enforcement
2. Court
3. Correction
2. Judiciary system – it is the network of courts that interpret the law in the name
of the state, and carry out the administration of justice in civil, criminal,
and administrative matters in accordance with the rule of law.
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-The economic changes have created new opportunities, but have also led to an
increase in crime, particularly in matters of drug trafficking and money laundering.
1. INQUISITORIAL
The prosecution of crimes rests exclusively in the hands of the officers and
agents of the state who conduct investigation under the clock of secrecy and the
use of force, torture, intimidation in procuring confession from the suspect.
Outside the U.S most trials are concerned with legal guilt where everyone
knows the offender did it, and the purpose is to get the offender to apologize, own
up to their responsibility, argue for mercy, or suggest an appropriate sentence for
themselves.
2. ADVERSARIAL
The prosecutions are left in the hands of the prosecuting arms of the
government. The suspect is informed of the accusation and is given opportunity to
defend himself.
It is where the accused is innocent until proven guilty. The U.S adversarial
system is unique in the world. No other nation, not even U.K places as much
emphases upon determination of factual guilt in the courtroom as the U.S does.
2. MIXED SYSTEM
THORIES IN POLICING
1. CONTINENTAL
It is the theory of police service which maintains that police officers
are servants of higher authorities. This theory prevails in the continental
countries like France, Italy, and Spain
2. HOME RULE
It is the theory of police service which states that police officers are
servants of the community or the people. This theory prevails in country
with decentralized form of government. This is likewise the police service
theory that should prevail in the Philippines bases on the existing laws,
concepts, and principles.
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3. OPPORTUNITY THEORY
It is that long with higher standards of living, victims become more
careless or their belongings, and opportunities for committing crime
multiply.
4. DEMOGRAPHIC THEORY
It is based on the event when a greater number of children are being
born. As these baby booms grow up, delinquent subcultures develop out
the of adolescent identity crisis.
5. DEPRIVATION THEORY
It holds that process comes along with rising expectations. People
at the bottom develop unrealistic expectations while people at the top don’t
see themselves rising fast enough.
6. MODERNIZATION THEORY
It sees the problem as society becoming too complex or core
pattern of emotion.
2. URBAN-COMMERCIAL SOCIETY
It has civil law (some standards and customs are written down), specialized
police force (some for religious offices, others for enforcing the King’s law), and
punishment is inconsistent, sometimes harsh; sometimes lenient.
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It only has codified laws (statutes that prohibited) but laws that prescribed
good behavior, police become specialized in how to handle property crimes, and
the system of punishment is run on market principles of creating insensitive and
disincentives.
4. BUREAUCRATIC SOCIETY
It has a system of laws (along with armies of lawyers), police who tend to
keep busy handling political crime and terrorism, and a system of punishment
characterized by over criminalization and overcrowding.
Developing countries tend to be lumped into the first 1 and 2 types, and the
study of culture becomes more important
Developed countries tend to be the last 3 and 4, and the study of social
structure becomes more important.
1. COMMON LAW
It is in the U. S and U.K
It is distinguishes as strong adversarial system.
It involves two opposing side of a lawyer representing the defendant and a
prosecutor representing the people.
3. ISLAMIC LAW
It is known as Muslim or Arabic justice
Shariah Law
It is rooted in religious values and derives its premises from Koran.
Islamic system in general are characterized by the absence of the positive
law and are based more on the concept of natural justice.
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4. SOCIALIST SYSTEM
INTERIOR MINISTRY
Ministry of Internal Affairs or Ministry of Home Affairs
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Chapter 4
Model system is used to describe the countries being used as topic of discussion. These
countries are chosen not because they are greater than other but because they are the focus of
comparison being studied. In this discussion, having a world map with the student is require to
appreciate and identify the geographical location of the countries.
CANTONAL POLICE
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Criminologist were puzzled and attributed to either the high rate of firearm ownership
or the extensive welfare system.
It is a practice in Switzerland that a citizen will play shooting at firing range as a hobby and
a national sport. In other countries, people play football, volleyball, basketball or baseball; in
Switzerland it is a rifle shooting.
It is common that people go around with their rifles it because it is part of their educational
system to inculcate to their mind about the use and purpose of rifle in life and society.
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Currently, the police authority is exercised by the cantons, which are considered
sovereign states within the Confederation.
The organization of cantonal police forces generally reflects that of the country
whose language is the primary language of that canton.
The Federal Office of Police (fedpol) is the body of the Confederation responsible
for uncovering and prosecuting facts of serious criminality at the federal level. It also
provides support to national and international partners in the performance of their policing
duties and performs security and administrative police duties at the federal level. Fedpol
is attached to the Federal Department of Justice and Police (FDJP) within the federal
administration.
ORGANIZATION
Fedpol employs around 900 people from all professional backgrounds. The majority of
employees are 44 years old. The proportion of women, stable for years, is on average 34%. They
are 15% to occupy managerial positions. 76% of employees are German-speaking, 17% French-
speaking and less than 7% Italian-speaking. Some collaborators are Romansh or of another
linguistic origin. The Federal Office of Police has a budget of 270 million Swiss francs to carry out
the key tasks entrusted to it.
In the French-speaking cantons, the police are divided into two sections:
1. The gendarmerie, a uniformed organization which performs the tasks of police patrol and
response, and may conduct judicial enquiries. However, in certain cantons, the gendarmes have
the ability to conduct local or judicial enquiries.
2. The sûreté ('security' or 'safety'), civil investigators who work in the Criminal Investigation
Department (average and serious crime)
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1. The Kriminalpolizei (criminal police), who investigate crime and conduct criminal
investigations (similar to the sûreté).
2. The Schutzpolizei ('security' or 'protection' police), who respond to emergency calls and
conduct patrols (similar to the gendarmerie).
5. The Autobahnpolizei (highway patrol) who enforce traffic laws and investigate road
traffic
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1. Army (Artesh)
2. Revolutionary Guard Corps (Sepah)
3. Law Enforcement Force (Police)
-Revolutionary Guards
or Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC)
-The regular army defends Iran’s borders and maintains internal order.
The main role is in National Security and responsible for internal and
border security, law enforcement and Iran’s missile force.
-abbreviated as NAJA
-It is under the Ministry of Interior
-with Islamic Ideology
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• Border control;
• Crime fighting;
• Emergency services;
• Identity checks;
• International police cooperation with the INTERPOL community
with regard to the arrest and extradition of criminals;
• Preventing and fighting terrorism;
• Preventing the production, distribution and trafficking of illicit drugs;
• Preventing trafficking in human beings and weapons;
• Public security and peace;
• Traffic control.
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POLICE DEPARTMENT
- the official name of regular police force and handles most day-to-day
police activities. It is highly centralized force and usually headed by a member
of royal family.
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- deals with domestic security and counter-intelligence and it runs also the
Ulaysha Prison where it holds their prisoners for arbitrary detention
Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice or (CPVPV)
-is the government agency employing religious police and enforcing Sharia
Law in Saudi Arabia.
- known for having full beards and wear headscarves and often coming
from Saudi Arabia’s lower classes.
Duties:
- they had the power to arrest unrelated males and females socializing,
engaged in homosexual behavior or prostitution, enforce dress code, and store
closure during prayer time.
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“Jewish State”
Law enforcement services in Israel are provided by the Israel Police, the
national police force created in 1948. The force is part of the Ministry of Public
Security, which is also responsible for Prison Services, the Anti-Drug Authority,
and the Witness Protection Authority.
The Israel Police is headed by a Commissioner of Police who is appointed
by the government upon recommendation of the Minister of Public Security.
The Israel Police is made up of seven territorial districts, Border Police, and
seven departments each with distinct policing responsibilities. The force is made
up of approximately 27,000 officers.
Mission:
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1. ISRAEL POLICE
- “Misheteret Yisra’el”
It is the civilian police force in Israel that operates throughout the Israel and
Area C of the West Bank.
2. CIVIL GUARD
-Known as Mash’az
The volunteers give more of their time involved in traffic control and they receive
police training, wear police uniforms and limited police power.
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The Minimum requirement is 12 hours per month, most volunteer are armed with
M1 Carbine and specialized such as bicycle riders, search and rescue teas, drives and
translators
OPERATIONAL UNITS
-MAGAV
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Officers are often recruited from IDF and Border Police Special Forces
having all served in combat units of one kind or another.
Officers wear gray trouser and jackets with a black cap embossed with their
unit insignia.
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ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE
Prefectural Police
Cabinet- it is a body of high-ranking state officials, typically consisting of the top leaders
of the executive branch.
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National Public Safety Commission ensure that Japan's police are an apolitical
body and free of direct central government executive control.
It administers and set a policy for the National Police Agency and has the authority
to appoint or dismiss senior police officers.
Unlike comparable bodies, such as the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, the
NPA does not have any police officers of its own.
Japan’s National Police Agency (NPA) supervises and controls the police activities
of 47 Prefectural Police Departments, including the Tokyo Metropolitan Police
Department. The NPA is made up of about 7,800 officials, including 2,100 police officers,
900 Imperial Guards and 4,800 civilians.
The NPA is headed by a Commissioner General who is appointed by the National
Public Safety Commission (NPSC) with the approval of the Prime Minister. The NPSC is
made up of a Chairman (who holds the rank of Minister of State), and five other
members. It administers the NPA and guarantees the neutrality of the police.
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PREFECTURAL POLICE
RANKS
Superintendent (Keishi):
The Chief of Police Station (small or middle), The Vice Commanding
Officer of Police Station, Commander of Riot Unit.
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England is just a Kingdom under United Kingdom (UK) of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland, known as UK or Britain, before to proceed details about law
enforcement in London, overview of U.K must discuss to avoid confusion.
UNITED KINGDOM
1. England
2. Scotland
3. Northern Ireland
4. Wales
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Each force is led by a Chief Constable who is accountable to law, to the Home
Secretary and to local democratic oversight. Democratic oversight is provided by elected
Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs) in most areas and by the Mayor’s Office in
London.
Flag of England
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England. Since, the compound is seldom to use and upon the approval of the Law
proposed by Sir Robert Peel, the government cannot provide immediately an office
intended for the police headquarters; the Scotland Yard serve as the office of the
metropolitan police service during early years and over the time.
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While some smaller or area specific police forces (ports, docks, tunnels etc.) may
use variations on, or fewer of, these ranks, most territorial police forces and forces have
a standard set of operational ranks:
Police Constable
Sergeant
Inspector
Chief Inspector
Superintendent
Chief Superintendent
The City of London Police is the territorial police force responsible for
law enforcement within the City of London, including the Middle and Inner
Temples.
The force responsible for law enforcement within the remainder of Greater
London, outside of the City, is the Metropolitan Police Service, a separate
organization.
The City of London, which is now primarily a financial business district with a small resident
population but a large commuting workforce, is the historic core of London, and has an
administrative history distinct from that of the rest of the metropolis, of which its separate police
force is one manifestation.
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The police authority is the Common Council of the City, and unlike other territorial forces
in England and Wales there is no commissioner replacing that police authority by way of
the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011, but like the commissioner, the Common
Council is elected, thus achieving the same aim of democratic accountability.
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At national level, the AFP works with Australian government departments, state and
territory law enforcement agencies and other partner agencies to disrupt, deter and defeat
criminal activity.
At global level, the AFP operates within a large network of international law enforcement
agencies, industry partners, and foreign governments to identify and disrupt transnational serious
and organised crime.
Through its International Deployment Group, the AFP also provides a range of capacity
development initiatives and peacekeeping and stability operations. The group contributes to the
development, maintenance or restoration of the rule of law in countries that seek Australia's
support.
The AFP is responsive to a rapidly changing criminal environment and has eight key
investigative priorities. These are:
Generally, all police forces of Australia follow this rank structure with some
individual state police forces have ranks differing slightly.
Commissioner
Deputy Commissioner
Assistant Commissioner
Commander
Chief Superintendent
Superintendent
Inspector
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Non-Commissioned Ranks
Senior Constable
Constable
Probationary Constable
Responsible for public security, the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) is part of
the State Council, China’s chief administrative body and principal police and security
authority.
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Law enforcement services in China are provided by Public Security Bureaus, the
provincial and municipal public security counterparts which, under the leadership of
local government, operate in the main towns, cities and counties of China.
Mission:
1. National Security;
2. Economic Crime Investigation;
3. Border Control;
4. Criminal Investigation;
5. Fire Control;
6. Prison Security;
7. Traffic Control;
8. International Police Cooperation;
9. Drug Control;
10. Counter-terrorism.
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The People's Armed Police, the Law on the People's Armed Police Force (PAPF),
is having a statutory authority to respond to riots, terrorist attacks or other emergencies.
Such unit’s guard government buildings at all levels (including party and state
organizations, foreign embassies and consulates), provide security to public corporations
and major public events, as well as counter-terrorism and handling of public emergencies.
Some units perform guard duty in civilian prisons and provide executioners for the
state. The PAP also maintains tactical counter-terrorism (CT) units in the Immediate
Action Unit (IAU), Snow Wolf Commando Unit(SWCU) and various Special Police
Units (SPUs).
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Rank
In France, two
directorates-general provide Police missions:
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It is considered a civilian police force. Its origins date back to 1812 and was
created by Eugène François Vidocq. In 1966 its name was officially changed to
"Police Nationale". It has primary responsibility for major cities and large urban
areas.
Missions:
1. The fight against urban violence, petty crime and road safety;
2. The control of irregular immigration and the fight against the
employment of illegal immigrants;
3. The fight against drugs, organized crime and serious economic and
financial crime;
4. The protection of the country against terrorism and the attacks on the
fundamental interests of the nation;
5. The maintenance of public order.
6. The National Police is attached to the Ministry of the Interior, Overseas
Territories, Territorial Communities and Immigration.
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The Municipal Police (French: Police Municipale) are the local police of towns and
cities in France outside the capital. The French municipal police are under the direct
authority of the mayor and may or may not be armed according to the local mayor's
discretion.
The Paris Police Prefecture (French: Préfecture de police de Paris) is the unit of
the French Ministry of the Interior which provides police, emergency services and
various administrative services to the population of the city of Paris.
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RANKS
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Whilst the PRC is responsible for the territory's defense and foreign affairs, Hong
Kong maintains its own legal system, police force, monetary system, customs policy and
immigration policy.
Law enforcement services in Hong Kong are provided by the Hong Kong Police
Force.
Mandate:
RANKS
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Whilst PRC is responsible for the territory's defense and foreign affairs, Macao
maintains its own legal system, police force, monetary system, customs policy and
immigration policy.
Both Forces are under the command of the Secretary for Security.
RANKS
Senior ranks
Superintendent general
(superintendente-geral)
Superintendent (superintendente)
Intendent (intendente)
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Sub-Intendent (subintendente)
Commissioner (comissário)
Sub-commissioner (subcomissário)
Chief (chefe)
Sub-chief (subchefe)
Basic ranks
Principal constable (guarda principal)
Constable first class (guarda de primeira)
Constable (guarda)
Police is the federal law-enforcement agency in Russia, operating under the Ministry of
Internal Affairs. It was established in 2011, replacing the Militsiya, the former police service.
It is the federal police service of Russia that operates according to the law on police as
approved by the Federal Assembly, and subsequently signed into law on February 7, 2011 by
then President of the Russian Federation, Dmitry Medvedev.
RANKS
General of police of the Russian federation
Police colonel General
Police Lieutenant General
Police Major General
Police Colonel
Police Lieutenant colonel
Police Major
Police Captain
Police Senior Lieutenant
Police Lieutenant
Police Junior Lieutenant
Police Senior Praporshchik
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Police Praporshick
Police Starshina
Police Senior Sergeant
Police Sergeant
Police Junior Sergeant
Police Private
GERMANY
With 40,000 employees – more than 30,000 of them fully trained police
officers – BPOL is a country-wide operational police force responsible for domestic
security. As part of Germany’s Ministry of Interior, it is Germany’s uniformed police
responsible for:
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Today nine of sixteen State Police Forces recruit only for the career bracket of the
"gehobener Dienst".
Period of training is 2 1/2 years at the police academy starting with the rank
of Polizeimeister-Anwärter.
The highest possible rank in this bracket is that of Polizeihauptmeister mit Zulage.
In the mid to late seventies the "mittlerer Dienst" was disestablished for the detective
branch Kriminalpolizei, but in some states of the former GDR, they still exist. Rank
designation, in this case, f.e. Kriminalhauptmeister.
Entry into the "gehobener Dienst" requires a high-school diploma and period of
training is 3 years at a college of administration and justice.
The third career bracket is the so-called "höherer Dienst". A direct entry into this
career bracket is possible and requires a law degree of a university, but the majority of
these officers had started their career in "mittlerer" or "gehobener Dienst".
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The DPS is headed by the “Chief of Police - Director General of Public Security”
who is appointed by the President of the Italian Republic upon recommendation of the
Ministry of Interior.
The DPS is in charge of the technical and operational coordination of law enforcement
activities carried out by the five national police forces. Their investigations are coordinated
through the Public Prosecutor’s Office, and each one sits structurally in a different Ministry:
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The DPS manages, supports and administrates the five police forces through its
coordination boards, multi-agency schools, information structures and joint databases.
The DPS’s role will increase over time with a view to maximising overall law enforcement
efficiency.
In the months to come, the 'Corpo Forestale dello Stato’ and ‘Carabineri’ will merge
to form a new law enforcement agency with the crime investigation and prevention
mandate of both agencies.
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The Minister of the Interior is responsible for the general administration of citizen
security and the superior command of the State Security Forces and Corps, as well as
cooperation and assistance relations with the police authorities of other countries, in
accordance with the provisions of international treaties and agreements.
Under the immediate authority of the Minister of the Interior, these functions are
exercised by the Secretary of State for Security, on whom they directly depend:
It is an armed institute of civil nature that depends on the Ministry of the Interior
and is composed of 70,000 people; It is deployed in police stations in all provincial capitals
and major cities and towns of the national territory.
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Civil Guard
-Guardia Civil
- responsible for general rural policing, firearms and explosives control; traffic
policing on interurban roads; protection of communication routes, coasts, frontiers, ports,
and airports; enforcement of environmental and conservation laws, including those
governing hunting and fishing; and interurban transport of prisoners. The Guardia Civil
has operated as military police in support of the Spanish armed forces on peace-keeping
deployment.
This body has competence in matters such as the legislation on arms and
explosives, the fiscal protection of the State and the prosecution of contraband, the
surveillance of traffic on interurban public roads and the custody of borders, ports and
airports.
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Policía Portuaria
- uniformed service similar to local police, but with additionally special
administrative duties related to public safety in loading and unloading of vessels, storage
of cargo etc.
Agentes forestales
- specialist service with powers similar to local police, but also responsible for
maintaining forested areas in a safe condition. this uniformed force controls all hunting
activities and has powers to prevent visitors from gathering or damaging wild plants,
dumping rubbish, starting fires or behaving irresponsibly in addition to providing routine
surveillance and fire extinction services via regular surface and airborne patrols as well as
from fixed towers and strategic installations
Policia Local
-exist in most cities and important towns in order to concentrate on preventing
crime, settling minor incidents, traffic control, and, crucially, intelligence gathering.
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Vision:
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Mandate
RANKS
Commissioner General
Chief Superintendent General
Senior Superintendent General
Superintendent General
Senior Superintendent
Superintendent
Senior Inspector
Inspector
Assistant Inspector
Senior Police Officer
Police Officer
Auxiliary Policeman
Sergeant Constable
Corporal Constable
Private Constable First Class
Private Constable
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Many law enforcement services in the Vatican are provided by the Vatican City
State Gendarmerie (Corpo della Gendarmeria dello Stato della Città del Vaticano).
Headed by an Inspector General, the force of 130 Italian officers sits structurally in
the Security Services and Civil Defence Directorate.
Mandate:
Accident prevention;
Crime investigation;
Financial and commercial regulations
enforcement;
Public order;
State security;
Traffic control;
Judicial services;
Protection of the Pope.
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Structure:
Rapid Response Group - two operational units under the direct supervision of the
Gendarmerie Commander:
Gruppo Intervento Rapido(GIR) - special weapons and tactics team;
Hazardous Devices Operation Unit.
Created in 2000 and operational 24 hours a day, an operations and control center
coordinates law enforcement action required in emergency and crisis situations. It is
equipped with state-of-the-art alarm and video surveillance systems.
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It is a military unit of the Holy See, not Vatican City State. The Swiss Guard are
responsible for the security of the Pope, dignitaries and all papal buildings. The Swiss
Guard have maintained a centuries long tradition of carrying swords and spears,
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Law enforcement in Canada are public-sector police forces that are associated
with and commissioned to the three levels of government: municipal (both lower
and upper-tier), provincial, and federal.
Most urban areas have been given the authority by the provinces to maintain their
own police force. All but two of Canada's provinces in turn, contract out their provincial
law-enforcement responsibilities to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (popularly known
in English-speaking areas as the Mounties), the national police force, which is
commissioned to the federal level of government.
-known as Mounties
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POLICE RANKS
The Chief of Police is the title of the head of most Canadian police forces except for:
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The Nigerian Police (NP) formerly The Nigeria Police Force is the principal law
enforcement agency in Nigeria.
Mandate:
The Police Mobile Force was established as a strike or Anti-riot unit under the control
of the Inspector-General of Police to counter incidents of civil disturbance. It is designated to
take over
operations of major crisis where conventional police units cannot cope.
Three major Governmental Agencies oversee the control and supervision of the
Nigerian Police Force; The Police Service Commission, the Nigerian Police Council and
Ministry of interior.
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The PSC is the civilian oversight body on the police. It is responsible for
appointment, promotion, and discipline of all police officers except the Inspector
General of Police. It shall collaborate, cooperate and work with all the stake
holders, namely the police council with the President of Nigeria as Chairman, all
the Governors of the Federating States of Nigeria, the Minister of Interior and the
Inspector-General of Police as members to turn the police around and enable it to
meet the challenges of the 21st century.
POLICE RANKS
Inspector General
Deputy Inspector-General of Police
Assistant Inspector-General of Police
Commissioner of Police
Deputy Commissioner of Police
Assistant Commissioner of Police
Chief Superintendent of Police
Superintendent of Police
Deputy Superintendent of Police
Assistant Superintendent of Police
Inspector of Police
Sergeant Major
Sergeant
Corporal
Constable
Missions:
1. guarantee of public liberty, peace and tranquility, and defense of the institutions of the
Republic;
2. maintenance and restoration of public order;
3. fight against crime, organized crime, transnational organized crime, terrorism;
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4. investigation and detection of offenses against the criminal law, implementation of the
means for their repression, in accordance with the Penal Code and Criminal Procedure;
5. surveillance of the national territory, information of the authorities on the political,
economic and social situation;
6. border control, security and safety at ports and airports;
7. application of legislation concerning the conditions of entry, residence and settlement
of foreigners in Senegal;
8. establishment of travel documents;
9. assistance to the execution of diplomatic and consular missions, and within international
organizations;
10. participatory implementation of the concept of human security.
The General Directorate of the National Police (DGPN) comprises ten directorates:
Territory Surveillance;
Federal police;
Public security;
Air and Border Police;
Foreigners Police and Travel Documents;
National School of Police and Continuing Education;
Personal;
Budget and Materials;
Central Office for the Suppression of Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs;
Mobile Intervention Group
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Objectives:
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Chapter 5
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The US Constitution gives the federal government the power to deal with foreign
affairs and interstate affairs (affairs between the states).
For policing, this means that if a non-federal crime is committed in a US state and
the fugitive does not flee the state, the federal government has no jurisdiction. However,
once the fugitive crosses a state line they violate the federal law of interstate flight and is
subject to federal jurisdiction, at which time federal law enforcement agencies may
become involved.
AMERICA
The Americas, or America, also known as the Western Hemisphere and the
New World, comprise the totality of territories in North America and South
America.
The earliest known use of the name America dates to April 25, 1507, where it was
applied to what is now known as South America.
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The American Civil War, widely known in the United States as simply the Civil
War
It is a civil war fought from 1861 to 1865 to determine the survival of the Union
or independence for the Confederacy.
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SLAVERY
It is the humanitarian consideration behind the civil war, where confederated south used
slavery for their government survival which is strictly opposed by the Union of the North.
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1. REPUBLICAN PARTY
The party is generally split on the issue of how to deal with illegal
immigration
2. DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Tracing its origins back to Thomas Jefferson's and James Madison's the
Democratic Party was founded around 1828, making it the world's oldest active
party.
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TYPES OF POLICE
1. FEDERAL POLICE
2. STATE POLICE
3. COUNTY POLICE
1. FEDERAL
Federal police possess full federal authority as given to them under United States
Code (U.S.C.) and federal law enforcement agencies are authorized to enforce various
laws at the federal level.
Both police and law enforcement agencies operate at the highest level and are
endowed with police roles.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) is responsible for most law enforcement duties
at the federal level and it includes the following:
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It should be noted that the United States Coast Guard is assigned to the United
States Department of Defense in the event of war.
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The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is the domestic intelligence and security
service of the United States, which simultaneously serves as the nation's prime Federal law
enforcement organization.
FBI is concurrently a member of the U.S. Intelligence Community and reports to both the
Attorney General and the Director of National Intelligence. A leading U.S. counterterrorism,
counterintelligence, and criminal investigative organization,
Not only is the DEA the lead agency for domestic enforcement of the Controlled
Substances Act, sharing concurrent jurisdiction with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
It also has sole responsibility for coordinating and pursuing U.S. drug investigations
abroad.
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The United States Marshals Service (USMS) is the enforcement arm of the U.S
federal Courts and the oldest American federal law enforcement agency
The U.S. Marshals are the primary agency for fugitive operations, responsible for
prisoner transport, the protection of officers of the court, and for the effective operation of
the judiciary. The Marshals service runs the Witness Protection Program and serves
federal arrest warrants.
2. Protection, which entails ensuring the safety of current and former national
leaders and their families, such as the President, past Presidents, Vice Presidents,
presidential candidates, visiting heads of state, and foreign embassies.
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2. STATE
A state of the United States of America is one of the 50 constituent political entities that
shares its sovereignty with the United States federal government. A.k.a as Commonwealth.
In all of the U.S. states, the chief executive is called the Governor, who serves as both
the ceremonial head of state and administrative head of government.
Due to the shared sovereignty between each U.S. state and the U.S. federal government,
an American is a citizen of both the federal republic and of his or her state of domicile.
State citizenship and residency are flexible, and no government approval is required
to move between states, except for persons covered by certain types of court orders
(e.g., paroled convicts and children of divorced spouses who are sharing custody)
STATE POLICE
The state police are a police body unique to each U.S. state, having statewide
authority to conduct law enforcement activities and criminal investigations.
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In general, they perform functions outside the jurisdiction of the county sheriff such as:
They support local police and help to coordinate multi-jurisdictional task force
activity in serious or complicated cases in those states that grant full police powers
statewide.
A general trend has been to bring all of these agencies under State Department
of Public Safety.
Additionally, they may serve under different state departments such as:
Twenty-three U.S. states use the term "State Police" and the other is “Highway
Patrol”.
There are 49 states with State Police with Hawaii being the only state in the Union
with no state police so named.
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3. COUNTY
Sheriff is a county official and is typically the top law enforcement officer of a
county. The law enforcement agency headed by a sheriff is typically referred to as
a sheriff's office.
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Historically, the sheriff was also commander of the militia in that county. Distinctive
in law enforcement in the United States, sheriffs are usually elected.
The authority of the sheriff varies from state to state, a sheriff or their deputies has
the power to make arrests within his or her own jurisdiction. Some states extend this
authority to adjacent counties or to the entire state.
It also performs other functions such as traffic control and enforcement, accident
investigations, and maintenance and transportation of prisoners.
Some larger sheriff's departments may have aviation (including fixed-wing aircraft
or helicopters), canine units, mounted details, or water patrols at their disposal.
HISTORY OF SHERIFF
The term, from the Old English scīrgerefa, designated a royal official responsible
for keeping the peace (a "reeve") throughout a shire or county on behalf of the king.
A shire is a traditional term for a division of land, found in the United Kingdom.
A reeve was a senior official with local responsibilities under the Crown e.g. as
the chief magistrate of a town or district.
In principle, a sheriff is a legal official with responsibility for a "shire", i.e. county.
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- the duties of a sheriff vary across states and counties. A sheriff is generally an
elected county official, and the duties of the sheriff's department generally include
policing rural areas, maintaining county jails, and serving warrants and court
papers.
-sheriffs are legal officials similar to bailiffs in some counties and in the cities
of Dublin and Cork.
6. In Canada
-sheriffs used to be county legal officials. They exist in most provinces. But the
one-to-one linkage between sheriffs and counties is no longer maintained.
The provincial sheriff services generally manage and transport court prisoners,
serve court orders, and in some provinces, Sheriffs provide security for the court system,
protect public officials, support investigations by local police services and in Alberta,
Sheriffs carry out traffic enforcement.
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COUNTY POLICE
In some areas, there is a sheriff's department which only handles issues such as
service of papers along with security for the local courthouse.
In other areas, there are no county police and the local sheriff is the exclusive law
enforcement agency and acts as both sheriff and county police, which is much more
common than there being a separate county police force.
ALASKA
The U.S. State of Alaska is divided into 19 organized boroughs and one
"Unorganized Borough “
Some areas in the unorganized borough receive limited public services directly
from the Alaska state government, usually law enforcement from the Alaska State
Troopers and educational funding.
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It is a division of the Alaska Department of Public Safety (DPS). The Alaska State
Troopers are a full-service law enforcement agency and handle both traffic and criminal law
enforcement.
The Alaska State Troopers are also involved in apprehending fugitives as part of the
Alaska Fugitive Task Force, an inter-agency collaborative of Alaska police departments that
cooperates with police agencies throughout the United States and less commonly with Interpol in
apprehending wanted men and women.
Unlike many lower-48 states, Alaska troopers are both state troopers and game/wildlife
enforcement officers.
Because Alaska has no counties, therefore no county police or sheriffs, in its constitution,
the troopers also handle civil papers and mental health custody orders and serve police
throughout mostly all of rural Alaska.
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The Commissioner, if a sworn officer upon being appointed as such, may be appointed a
"Special Alaska State Trooper" to maintain police powers. The Alaska State Troopers (AST) and
Alaska Wildlife Troopers (AWT) are headed by ranking officers with the rank of Colonel.
LOUISIANA
POLICE JURY
The Police Jury is the legislative and executive government of the parish and is
elected by the voters.
Not every parish is governed by a Police Jury, but 41 of the 64 parishes use this
system.
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Its members are called Jurors, and together they elect a President as their
chairman.
The President presides over the Police Jury and serves as the titular head of the
parish government.
As one of the principal members of the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC), CIA
reports to the Director of National Intelligence and is primarily focused on providing
intelligence for the President and his Cabinet.
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CIA serves as the national manager for coordination and deconfliction of HUMINT
activities across the entire intelligence community
Moreover, CIA is the only agency authorized by law to carry out and oversee covert
action on behalf of the President, unless the President determines that another agency is
better suited for carrying out such action.
PURPOSE
When the CIA was created, its purpose was to create a clearinghouse for foreign
policy intelligence and analysis. Today its primary purpose is to collect, analyze, evaluate,
and disseminate foreign intelligence, and to perform covert actions.
According to its fiscal 2013 budget, the CIA has five priorities:
1. Counterterrorism, the top priority, given the ongoing Global War on Terror.
2. Nonproliferation of nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction,
with North Korea described as perhaps the most difficult target.
3. Warning American leaders of important overseas events,
with Pakistan described as an "intractable target".
4. Counterintelligence, with China, Russia, Iran, Cuba, and Israel described as
"priority" targets.
5. Cyber intelligence.
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1. Unconventional Warfare
- the most important mission
2. Foreign Internal Defense
3. Special Reconnaissance
4. Direct Action
5. Counter-Terrorism
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DELTA FORCE
-(1ST SFOD-D)
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Chapter 6
Objectives of ASEANPOL
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FUNCTIONS
• Prepare and implement work plans for effective implementation of all the
resolutions adopted in the annual Joint Communiqués signed at the ASEANAPOL
Conferences;
• Facilitate and coordinate cross-border cooperation on intelligence and information
sharing and exchange;
• Facilitate and coordinate joint operations and activities involving criminal
investigations, the building and maintenance of the ASEANAPOL database,
training, capacity building, the development of scientific investigative tools,
technical support and forensic science;
• Provide support and necessary assistance in organising the ASEANAPOL
Conferences;
• Submit on a quarterly basis to the Chiefs of ASEAN Police Forces proposals on all
planned programmed and activities to be carried out;
• Prepare an annual report on its activities and expenditure to be presented to the
ASEANAPOL Executive Committee immediately before the ASEANAPOL
Conference, and distributed to all members and to the ASEANAPOL Conference;
and;
• Act as a custodian of all documents and records of ASEANAPOL
2. EUROPOL
Mission:
The mission of Europol is to make a significant contribution to the European Union’s Law
enforcement action against organized crime and terrorism with an emphasis on targeting
criminal organizations.
Europol supports the law enforcement activities of the Member States by:
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Yes, Europol only acts on request at present. However, the Protocol of the 28
November 2002 amending the Europol convention, allows Europol to request the
competent authorities of the Member States to investigate.
“Member States should deal with any request from Europol to initiate, conduct or
co-ordinate investigations in specific cases and should give such request due
consideration. Europol should be informed whether the requested investigation will be
initiated”.
There are numerous advantages for the European law enforcement community.
Europol is unique in this field as it is a multi-disciplinary agency, comprising not only
regular police officers but staff members from the various law enforcement agencies of
the Member States and covering specialized areas such as customs, immigration
services, intelligence services, border and financial police.
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3. IACP
Mission:
INTERPOL
It is an intergovernmental organization
facilitating international police cooperation.
To keep Interpol as politically neutral as possible, its charter forbids it, at least in
theory, from undertaking interventions or activities of a political, military, religious, or racial
nature or involving itself in disputes over such matters.
Its work focuses primarily on public safety and battling terrorism, crimes against
humanity, environmental crime, genocide, war crimes, organized crime, piracy,
illicit traffic in works of art, illicit drug production, drug trafficking, weapons
smuggling, human trafficking, money laundering, child pornography, white-collar
crime, computer crime, intellectual property crime and corruption.
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Article 3 states:
1. It is strictly forbidden for the Organization to undertake any intervention
or activities of a political, military, religious or racial character.
REGIONAL BUREAUS
1. Abidjan, Africa
2. Buenos Aires, Argentina
3. Harare, Zimbabwe
4. Nairobi, Kenya
5. San Salvador, El Salvador
6. Liaison Office, Bangkok, Thailand
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INTERNATIONAL NOTICES
RED NOTICE
YELLOW NOTICE
BLUE NOTICE
BLACK NOTICE
GREEN NOTICE
-to provide warning and criminal intelligence about person who have
committed criminal offences are likely to repeat crimes in other countries.
ORANGE NOTICE
PURPLE NOTICE
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UNITED NATIONS
A replacement for the ineffective League of Nations, the organization was established on
24 October 1945 after World War II with the aim of preventing another such conflict. At its
founding, the UN had 51 member states; there are now 193.
Its objectives include maintaining international peace and security, promoting human
rights, fostering social and economic development, protecting the environment, and providing
humanitarian aid in cases of famine, natural disaster, and armed conflict. The UN is the largest,
most familiar, most internationally represented and most powerful intergovernmental
organization in the world
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Peacekeepers monitor and observe peace processes in post-conflict areas and assist ex-
combatants in implementing the peace agreements they may have signed. Such assistance
comes in many forms, including confidence-building measures, power-sharing arrangements,
electoral support, strengthening the rule of law, and economic and social development.
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The Armed Forces of the Philippines Peacekeeping Operations Center is one of the
wide support units of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.
The AFP PKOC trains and deploys Filipino peacekeepers from various units of the AFP.
So far, however, only the AFP and PNP has deployed peacekeepers to UN missions.
PEACKEEPING MISSIONS
Africa
United Nations Operation in the Congo (ONUC)
United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL)
United Nations Mission in Côte d'Ivoire (MINUCI)
United Nations Operation in Côte d'Ivoire (ONUCI)
United Nations Operation in Burundi (ONUB)
United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA)
United Nations Mission in the Sudan (UNMIS)
United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS)
North America
United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haïti (MINUSTAH)[9][11]
Asia
United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC)
United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET)
United Nations Mission of Support in Timor-Leste (UNMISET)
United Nations Office in Timor-Leste (UNOTIL)
United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT)
United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP)
Middle East
United Nations Supervision Mission in Syria (UNSMIS)
United Nations Disengagement Observer Force in the Golan Heights (UNDOF)
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Chapter 7
COUNTRIES
Brunei Malaysia
Burma (Myanmar) Philippines
Cambodia Singapore
East Timor Thailand
Indonesia Vietnam
Laos
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1. BRUNEI
RANKS
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2. BURMA (MYANMAR)
RANKS
3. CAMBODIA
The National Police numbers 64,000 and is divided into four autonomous units
and five central departments
The National Police share significant functional overlap with the Military Police
(officially the National Gendarmerie), which functions within the Ministry of Defense.
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The Ministry governs the Cambodian National Police and the administration of
the law enforcement; including the police academy ,police training, judicial police, anti-
drug efforts, border police and prison administration.
The Cambodian National Police is divided into four autonomous units, headed
collectively by the First Deputy Director of National Police, and five central departments,
each managed by a Chief of Department and Deputy Director:
1. Interpol unit
2. Headquarters unit
3. Intervention unit
4. Drug Enforcement unit
4. TIMOR-LESTE
May 2002 the PNTL was established by the United Nations before sovereignty
was passed to the new state, with a mandate to provide security and maintain law and
order throughout the country.
On 10 August 2001, the East Timor Police Service was officially established,
working alongside CivPol, the United Nations Civilian Police Force. It later changed its
name to the Timor-Leste Police Service, before finally adopting its current title of the
Policia Nacional de Timor-Leste.
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5. INDONESIA
The police were formally separated from the military ("TNI") in April 1999, a process
which was formally completed in July 2000.
The organization is now independent and is under the direct auspices of the President of
Indonesia, while the Armed Forces is under the Ministry of Defense. Until this day, the Indonesian
National Police is and still holds control of law enforcement and policing duties all over Indonesia
nationally.
RANKS
Police General
Commissioner General of Police
Inspector General of Police
Brigadier General
Police Chief Commissioner
Police Superintendent
Police Commissioner
Police Chief Inspector
Police Inspector 1st Class
Police Inspector 2nd Class
Police Sub-Inspector 1st Class
Police Chief Inspector Brigadier
Police Brigadier
Police First Brigadier
Police Second Brigadier
Police Brigadier Adjutant
Police Brigadier Adjutant 1st Class
Police Brigadier Adjutant 2nd Class
Chief Agent
Agent
Second Agent
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6. LAOS
1. an urban constabulary
2. a general gendarmerie
3. counter-insurgency armed support unit
The regular Laotian Police branch, this was the uniformed urban constabulary
tasked of providing security and maintaining law and order in the main population centers,
including the nation's capital city and the provincial capitals.
RANKS
Sip – Patrolman/Patrolwoman
Sip – Patrolman 1st class/Patrol woman 1st class
Sip Trii – Corporal
Sip Thó – Sergeant
Sip Êek – Staff Sergeant
Cãã Trii – Sergeant 1st class
Cãã Thó – Master Sergeant
Cãã Êek – Sergeant Major
Loei Trïï – 2nd Lieutenant
Loei Thö – 1st Lieutenant
Loei Êek – Captain
Phan Trïï – Major
Phan Thö – Lieutenant-Colonel
Phan Êek – Colonel
Phoun Chatäävä – Brigadier-General
Phoun Trïï – Major-General/Director of
the Royal Lao Police
7. MALAYSIA
Malacca's canonical law created what was essentially a police force in Malaysia in
the fifteenth century, through the institution of the Temenggung and Hulubalang, or royal
warriors.
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RANKS
Superintendent Grade
Superintendent of Police [SUPT]
Deputy Superintendent of Police [DSP]: District Division Chief
Assistant Superintendent of Police [ASP]: Station Chief Police.
Inspector Grade
Inspector [INSP]
Probationary Inspector [P/INSP]
Enlisted Grade
Sub-Inspector [S/INSP]
Sergeant Major [SM]
Sergeant [SGT]
Corporal [CPL]
Lance Corporal [L/CPL]
Constable
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8. PHILIPPINES
RANK
OLD NEW
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9. SINGAPORE
In addition, the strong emphasis on community policing since the 1980s has
attempted to promote a culture in which civilians can partake and contribute directly in
law enforcement efforts.
The Singapore Police Force is the main agency tasked with maintaining law
and order in the city-state.
RANKS
Police officers
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Lance Corporal
Obsolete for the regular force. Currently only available for the Gurkha
Contingent.
Special constable
Full-time National Servicemen. Promoted FTNS officers will have the SC prefix to
their rank, e.g. SC/Cpl, SC/Sgt.
Police Constable
This rank is no longer granted to regulars. However, officers below the rank of
inspector being discharged from the police force on disciplinary grounds are first
reduced to the rank of constable before their discharge
10. THAILAND
Sometimes the Royal Thai Police is recognized as the fourth armed force of
Thailand as their tradition, concept, culture, skill and training are relatively same as the
army and most of their officer cadets need to graduate from the Armed Forces Academies
Preparatory School.
RANK
Commissioned officers
Police General (phon tamruat ek)
Police Lieutenant General (phon tamruat tho)
Police Major General (phon tamruat tri)
Police Brigadier (rank in abeyance) (phon
tamruat jattawa)
Police Senior Colonel (phan tamruat ek phiset)
Police Colonel (phan tamruat ek)
Police Lieutenant Colonel (phan tamruat tho)
Police Major (phan tamruat tri)
Police Captain (roi tamruat ek)
Police Lieutenant (roi tamruat tho)
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Non-commissioned officers
11. VIETNAM
RANK
Commissioned officers
Đại tướng Công an Police General
Thượng tướng Công an Police Colonel General
Public Security
Trung tướng Công an Police Lieutenant General
Thiếu tướng Công an Police Major General
Đại tá Công an Police Brigadier
Thượng tá Công an Police Colonel
Trung tá Công an Police Lieutenant Colonel
Thiếu tá Công an Police Major
Đại úy Công an Police Captain
Thượng úy Công an Police Senior Lieutenant
Trung úy Công an Police 1st Lieutenant
Thiếu úy Công an Police Sub-Lieutenant (2nd
Lieutenant).
Non-commissioned officers
Thượng sĩ Staff Sergeant
Trung sĩ Sergeant
Hạ sĩ Corporal
Policemen
Chiến sĩ bậc 1 Policeman 1st Class
Chiến sĩ bậc 2 Policeman
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Chapter 7
BANGLADESH
There are three agencies protecting the highest-ranking officer in the country.
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The SSF takes necessary measures in coordination with the civil administration
and security and intelligence organizations to prevent future threats to VIPs and protect
VIPs from active threats. The SSF is also responsible for the security of VIPs’ offices and
residences
The PGR is headed by the Military Secretary to the President and Commander,
President Guard Regiment.
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BAHRAIN
In 2011, King Hamad chose his own son, Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa, as the
commander of the Royal Guard so that he can be 100 percent sure of his and his family’s
safety.
ENGLAND
The Queen's Guard and Queen's Life Guard (called King's Guard and King's Life
Guard when the reigning monarch is male) are the names given to contingents
of infantry and cavalry soldiers charged with guarding the official royal residences in the United
Kingdom.
The British Army has regiments of both Horse Guards and Foot
Guards predating the English Restoration (1660), and since the reign of King
Charles II these regiments have been responsible for guarding the Sovereign's
palaces.
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They are not purely ceremonial, despite tourist perceptions to the contrary.
The Queen's Guards are fully operational soldiers.
FRANCE
It is the security unit created in 1983 in charge of the safety of the President
of France.
It is a unit within the French National Police which is responsible for the
protection of French and foreign dignitaries and the provision of technical security
support. The SDLP also implements the necessary measures for the organization
and security of official visits in France and abroad
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1. Guarding important public buildings in Paris such as the Élysée Palace (the
residence of the President of the French Republic), the Hôtel Matignon (the residence of
the Prime Minister of France), the Palais du Luxembourg (the Senate), the Palais
Bourbon (the National Assembly), the Palais de Justice, and keeping public order in Paris.
2. Honor and security services for the highest national personalities and important
foreign guests;
5. Staffing horseback patrol stations, particularly for the forests of the Île-de-
France region;
The close physical protection of the President of France is entrusted to the Groupe
de sécurité de la présidence de la République (GSPR) a mixed police–gendarmerie unit
which is not part of the Guard.
GREECE
EVZONES
Today, it refers to the members of the Presidential Guard, a ceremonial unit that
guards the Greek Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and the Presidential Mansion in Athens.
An Evzone is also known, colloquially, as a Tsoliás. Evzones are known for their
distinctive uniform, which evolved from the clothes worn by the klephts who fought
the Ottoman occupation of Greece.
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The most visible item of this uniform is the fustanella, a kilt-like garment. Their
distinctive dress turned them into a popular image for the Greek soldier, especially among
foreigners.
GEORGIA
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HONGKONG
It has primary responsibility for the personal safety of HKSAR Chief Executive and his/her
core family (it was Governor and his family before the Handover in 1997), high-ranking
government officials, VIPs and visiting dignitaries to Hongkong therefore, the training techniques
taught to all VIPPU officers include VIP protection and unarmed combat.
INDIA
It is an elite household cavalry regiment of the Indian Army. It is senior-most in the order
of precedence of the units of the Indian Army. The primary role of the President's Bodyguard is
to escort and protect the President of India which is why the regiment is based in the Rashtrapati
Bhavan in New Delhi, India. It is equipped as a mounted unit, with horses for ceremonies at the
presidential palace and BTR-80 vehicles for use in combat. The personnel of the regiment are
also trained as paratroopers and nominally are expected to lead in airborne assaults in the role
of pathfinders.
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It is "an armed force of the Union for providing proximate security to the Prime Minister of
India and former Prime Minister of India and members of their immediate families wherever they
are." It was formed in 1988 by an act of the Parliament of India.
Former PMs, their immediate family members, and family members of a serving Prime
Minister may, if they choose, decline SPG security.
INDONESIA
Paspampres or Pasukan
Pengamanan Presiden
(English: "Presidential Security Force")
It is the name of the Indonesianpresidential security unit and secret service concerned
with the tasks related to the protection of the President of Indonesia, Vice President of
Indonesia and its family including their residence.
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ITALY
JAPAN
It is an organization
which is dedicated to protection
of the Emperor of Japan and his
family, palaces and other
imperial properties.
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MOROCCO
The Moroccan Royal Guard is officially part of the Royal Moroccan Army.
However, it is under the direct operational control of the Royal Military Household of His
Majesty the King. The sole duty of the guard is to provide for the security and safety of the King
and royal family of Morocco.
NORWAY
Hans Majestet Kongens Garde (HMKG) (His Majesty the King's Guard)
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It is a police unit under the Oslo Police district. This force is responsible
only for the security of the royal family and can trace its roots back to the return of
the King immediately after the end of the Second World War.
It Is a security service under the control of the Ministry of Justice and the
Police, tasked with the security of members of the Norwegian government,
members of parliament and visiting foreign dignitaries.
NEW ZEALAND
is a branch of the New Zealand Police that provides personal security for
both national and visiting diplomats and VIPs. National VIPs that receive constant
protection are the Prime Minister and the Governor General, while Ministers of the
Crown, Members of Parliament, the Judiciary and the Leader of the
Opposition receive protection as needed. Protection is provided both in New
Zealand and abroad
PHILIPPINES
It is the lead agency tasked with providing security to the President of the
Philippines, the Vice President of the Philippines, and their immediate families.
The Presidential Security Group (PSG) is the lead agency tasked with providing
security to the President of the Philippines, the Vice President of the Philippines, and their
immediate families.
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RUSSIA
The Federal Protective Service (FSO) of the Russian Federation, official name in
English Federal Guard Service of the Russian Federation)
It is a federal government agency concerned with the tasks related to the protection of
several high-ranking state officials, mandated by the relevant law, including the President of
Russia, as well as certain federal properties.
SENEGAL
It is very similar in concept to the French Republican Guard, with which it is officially
twinned. The Red Guard is the direct descendant of a French colonial Spahi detachment sent to
Senegal in 1845.
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SOUTH KOREA
It is a South Korean close protection agency. Based on the United States Secret
Service, the South Korean PSS is an independent agency responsible for the protection
of the President of South Korea and the Blue House.
SPAIN
VATICAN
Swiss Guards
It refers to the Swiss soldiers who have served as guards at foreign European courts since
the late 15th century.
Foreign military service was outlawed by the revised Swiss Federal Constitution of 1874,
with the only exception being the Pontifical Swiss Guard stationed in Vatican City. The modern
Papal Swiss Guard serves as both a ceremonial unit and a bodyguard. Established in 1506, it
is one of the oldest military units in the world.
A small force maintained by the Holy See, it is responsible for the safety of the Pope,
including the security of the Apostolic Palace. The Swiss Guard serves as the de facto military
of Vatican City.
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References
Depayso, V.P. (2018). Comparative Police System: Global Responses of Law Enforcement
Officer to Crimes. Wiseman Books Trading, Inc. Quezon City
Garcia, M. P. (2010). Comparative Police System. Wiseman Books Trading, Inc. Quezon City
pg. 145