POLMAS in English
POLMAS in English
Partnership An Idea for the Times A Practical Approach to Problems Getting Back to the People
Community policing is a new philosophy of policing, based on the concept that police officers and private citizens can work together in creative ways to solve contemporary community problems related to crime, fear of crime, social and physical disorder and neighborhood decay. The philosophy is predicated on the belief that achieving these goals requires that police departments develop a new relationship with the law-abiding people in the community, allowing them a greater voice in setting local priorities, and involving them in efforts to improve the quality of life in their neighborhoods. It shifts the focus of police work from handling random calls to solving problems. (Trojanowicz and Bucqueroux, 1990:5)
PREVENTIVE
BEING ACTIVE
COMMUNITY POLICING
RAPIDLY SOCIAL CHANGE COMPLEXITY OF PUBLIC ORDER POLICE CAN NOT SOLVE ALL PUBLIC ORDER AND SECURITY PROBLEMS WITHOUT SOCIETY SUPPORT DIFFICULTIES IN RECOVERING CASES WITHOUT INFORMATIONS
PHILOSOPHY COMMUNITY POLICING IN INDONESIA POLICY STRATEGY PARTNERSHIP EMPHASIZE PROBLEM SOLVING
POLICE INSTITUTIO N
POLICE MUST BE TRUSTED BY SOCIETY PROFESSIONAL HUMAN RESOURCES COMUNICATION VISIT IMPROVING PUBLIC TRUST PATROL PROBLEM SOLVING QUICK RESPONSE FRIENDLY SIMBOLS OF PULBLIC MODELS
More Effective Ways to Solve Ongoing Problems Renewed Emphasis on Crime Prevention
Community Involvement Police Services Delivered Through the Neighborhood Patrol Officer Trust Is The Heart Long-Term Commitment Needed Wide-Ranging Benefits
Police perspective: to fix the relationship with the society due to controlling crime and reduce fear Society perspective: confession from the society that they have the right to have the service fro a beeter and accountable police Society + Police perspective: actually crimes being produced by the society itself where police has a very limited access to controll it .
1 . Philosophy and Organizational Strategy 2. Commitment to Community Empowerment 3. Decentralized and Personalized Policing 4. Immediate and Long-Term Proactive Problem Solving 5. Ethics, Legality, Responsibility and Trust 6. Expanding the Police Mandate 7. Helping Those with Special Needs 8. Grass-Roots Creativity and Support 9. Internal Change 10. Building for the Future
Community Policing: a Contemporary Perspective.Cincinnati, OH: Anderson Publishing Co.
Trojanowicz, Robert & Bucqueroux, Bonnie (1990).
COMMUNITY POLICING
IS NOT
A separated division A technique (its a strategy) A PR program(its not the aim but the effect) Being soft to the criminals A social-welfare work
PREVENT PHYSICAL CONFLICT PREVENT PUBLIC BRUTALITY PUBLIC AWARNESS OF REPORTING PUBLIC ORDER AND SECURITY PROBLEMS SOLVING SOCIAL PROBLEMS SOCIETY WILL TO GIVE INFORMATIONS TO POLICE