Policing Vulnerability
Editat de Isabelle Bartkowiak-Theron, Nicole Asquithen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 oct 2012
Concurrently, there have been stronger demands on police, and a steep increase in police powers in relation to their interaction with vulnerable people. The premise of this protectionist and interventionist agenda is threefold: to protect the rights of vulnerable individuals proactively cater for their vulnerability within the justice system; and to secure police operations and protocols within strict guidelines.
This collection unpacks ‘vulnerable people policing’ in theory and practice and guides the reader through the policing process as it is experienced by police officers, victims, offenders, witnesses and justice stakeholders. Each chapter features a single step of the policing process: from police recruit education through to custody, and the final transfer of vulnerable people to courts and sentencing.
This edited collection provides analytical, theoretical and empirical insights on vulnerable people policing, and reflects on critical issues in a domain that is increasingly subject to speedy conversion from policy to practice, and heightened media and political scrutiny. It breaks down policing practices, operations and procedures that have vulnerable populations as a focus, bringing together original and innovative academic research and literature, practitioner experience and discussion of policy implications (from local and international perspectives).
The particular nature of this collection highlights the multi-disciplinary nature of police work, sheds light on how specific, mandatory policies guide police officers steps in their interaction with vulnerable populations, and discusses the practicalities of police decision making at key points in this process.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781862878976
ISBN-10: 1862878978
Pagini: 302
Dimensiuni: 152 x 231 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Federation Press
ISBN-10: 1862878978
Pagini: 302
Dimensiuni: 152 x 231 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Federation Press
Cuprins
Foreword - Professor Peter Grabosky Part One—The Emergence and Contexts of Vulnerable People Policing Introduction: Vulnerability and Cultural Competency in Policing
Nicole L Asquith and Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron
Critically Reflecting on being ‘at Risk’ and ‘a Risk’ in Vulnerable People Policing
Sonya Stanford
'For when equality is given to unequals, the result is inequality': The Socio-Legal Ethics of Vulnerable People
Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron and Anna Corbo Crehan
Educating for Vulnerability
Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron and Catherine Layton
Part Two—Police and Vulnerable Populations: First Contact Quality of Life Policing in Broadacre Housing Estates
Rosmarie E Winter and Nicole L Asquith
Reaching out to Vulnerable People: The Work of Police Liaison Officers
Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron
The Vulnerable Thin Blue Line: Representations of Police Use of Force in the Media
Katrina Clifford
Part Three—Police Response to Incidents Involving Vulnerable People Policing Mental Illness: Examining the Police Role in Addressing Mental Ill-health
Victoria Herrington and Katrina Clifford
Policing Vulnerable Offenders: Police Early Encounters with Refugees
Penny Egan-Vine and Katie Fraser
Vulnerability and the Art of Complaint Making
Nicole L Asquith
Part Four—Vulnerable People and Custody Acquired Brain Injury and Vulnerability to the Criminal Justice System
James M Huntley
Twenty Years On: Indigenous Deaths in Police Custody and Lessons from the Frontline
Lorana Bartels
Detention and Investigation of Vulnerable Suspects
Karl Roberts and Victoria Herrington
Vulnerable Suspects and Arrest and Investigative Processes
Terese Henning
Part Five—Pathways to Sentencing and Punishment Vulnerabilities in the Courtroom
Lorana Bartels and Kelly Richards
The Relationship between Diversion, Restorative Justice and Vulnerability
Angela Robinson
The Path Forward: Policing Diversion and Desistance
Hannah Graham
Conclusion: Vulnerable People Policing – Past, Present and Future
Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron and Nicole L Asquith
Empathy and Justice Citizenship, Belonging and Justice Conclusion
Nicole L Asquith and Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron
Critically Reflecting on being ‘at Risk’ and ‘a Risk’ in Vulnerable People Policing
Sonya Stanford
'For when equality is given to unequals, the result is inequality': The Socio-Legal Ethics of Vulnerable People
Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron and Anna Corbo Crehan
Educating for Vulnerability
Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron and Catherine Layton
Part Two—Police and Vulnerable Populations: First Contact Quality of Life Policing in Broadacre Housing Estates
Rosmarie E Winter and Nicole L Asquith
Reaching out to Vulnerable People: The Work of Police Liaison Officers
Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron
The Vulnerable Thin Blue Line: Representations of Police Use of Force in the Media
Katrina Clifford
Part Three—Police Response to Incidents Involving Vulnerable People Policing Mental Illness: Examining the Police Role in Addressing Mental Ill-health
Victoria Herrington and Katrina Clifford
Policing Vulnerable Offenders: Police Early Encounters with Refugees
Penny Egan-Vine and Katie Fraser
Vulnerability and the Art of Complaint Making
Nicole L Asquith
Part Four—Vulnerable People and Custody Acquired Brain Injury and Vulnerability to the Criminal Justice System
James M Huntley
Twenty Years On: Indigenous Deaths in Police Custody and Lessons from the Frontline
Lorana Bartels
Detention and Investigation of Vulnerable Suspects
Karl Roberts and Victoria Herrington
Vulnerable Suspects and Arrest and Investigative Processes
Terese Henning
Part Five—Pathways to Sentencing and Punishment Vulnerabilities in the Courtroom
Lorana Bartels and Kelly Richards
The Relationship between Diversion, Restorative Justice and Vulnerability
Angela Robinson
The Path Forward: Policing Diversion and Desistance
Hannah Graham
Conclusion: Vulnerable People Policing – Past, Present and Future
Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron and Nicole L Asquith
Empathy and Justice Citizenship, Belonging and Justice Conclusion
Notă biografică
Isabelle is the Discipline Coordinator of Police Studies, University of Tasmania and Senior Researcher, Tasmanian Institute of Law Enforcement Studies. Isabelle teaches and researches policing, and specialises in the topic of vulnerable populations and policing. She teaches this very topic at the Tasmania Police Academy, a role she was already undertaking with the New South Wales Police Force, when she was working at Charles Sturt University.
She is a member of the Australian University Community Engagement Alliance Scholarship Committee, a member of the Ethical Review and Research Governance Advisory Committee of the Australian Institute of Police Management.
She is also an Associate Investigator at the Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security, and a member of the Australia Crime Prevention Council. She is an Adjunct Senior Lecturer at Charles Sturt University, in the School of Police Studies.
Nicole is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Social Sciences and Humanities at Deakin University, and Associate Senior Research Fellow with the Tasmania Institute of Law Enforcement Studies, University of Tasmania.
Nicole has worked as a practitioner and academic in the areas of policing hate crime, and policing in culturally and linguistically diverse societies for over 15 years.
Her current research with the London Metropolitan Police Service uses forensic linguistics to understand the context of hate speech in hate crime. Her work has been published in a range of edited collections and journals, and she is the co-author (with Rob White and Janine Haines) of Crime and Criminology.
She is a member of the Australian University Community Engagement Alliance Scholarship Committee, a member of the Ethical Review and Research Governance Advisory Committee of the Australian Institute of Police Management.
She is also an Associate Investigator at the Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security, and a member of the Australia Crime Prevention Council. She is an Adjunct Senior Lecturer at Charles Sturt University, in the School of Police Studies.
Nicole is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Social Sciences and Humanities at Deakin University, and Associate Senior Research Fellow with the Tasmania Institute of Law Enforcement Studies, University of Tasmania.
Nicole has worked as a practitioner and academic in the areas of policing hate crime, and policing in culturally and linguistically diverse societies for over 15 years.
Her current research with the London Metropolitan Police Service uses forensic linguistics to understand the context of hate speech in hate crime. Her work has been published in a range of edited collections and journals, and she is the co-author (with Rob White and Janine Haines) of Crime and Criminology.