Policing places with drug problems

Bibliographic Information

Policing places with drug problems

Lorraine Green

(Drugs, health, and social policy series, vol. 2)

Sage Publications, c1996

  • : cloth
  • : pbk

Available at  / 6 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 119-128) and indexes

Contents of Works

  • Introduction
  • The traditional approach
  • Policing places and problems
  • The SMART approach
  • Civil remedies for crime control purposes
  • What follows
  • Places, crimes and prevention perspectives
  • Places and crimes
  • Crime prevention perspectives
  • Side effects of place control programs
  • Summary
  • Policing places with drug problems : the SMART approach
  • The Oakland site
  • The SMART program
  • Program implementation
  • Summary
  • The SMART program impact
  • City-wide trends in drug activity
  • City-wide and SMART site trends
  • SMART impact on place appearances
  • Spatial, social and prevention influences
  • Target places and intervention dosage
  • Summary
  • Displacement and diffusion effects
  • Prior research
  • Measuring displacement and diffusion effects
  • Change in catchment areas
  • People contacted in catchment areas
  • Offender movement patterns
  • Summary
  • Conclusions
  • What changes a place?
  • The challenges of policing places with drug problems
  • Successfully policing places with drug problems
  • Final word

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This valuable study integrates concepts from environmental criminology and problem-oriented policing in a rigorous evaluation of civil remedies used to inhibit drug dealing. --Ronald V. Clarke, Dean, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University "Policing Places with Drug Problems is well-written, current, and interesting. In particular, it is by far the best description that I have read on the topic of 'place-oriented' strategies of crime control. The integration of the literature on different strategies is outstanding. The book will make an important contribution to the field. Police officers and administrators as well as academics, researchers, and policymakers will find the literature review and research interesting and informative." --Doris L. MacKenzie, University of Maryland at College Park "SMART inspections began as an innovative search for alternative ways to solve community problems. This book captures the essence of the program, its positive results, and raises issues about the future of police problem-solving efforts." --Bob Crawford, Founder, Beat Health Unit, Oakland Police Department "In Policing Places with Drug Problems, Lorraine Green has paid close attention to the lessons of the new criminology of crime prevention. Her methods are cautious and thoughtful, and tailor-made to the substantive problems she examines. This is one of the first major criminal justice evaluations to rely heavily on computer mapping technologies. Accordingly, Green draws from a broad array of data but links them to the places where the interventions are practiced. Her conclusions hold particular weight because she has selected a case study that provides a clear and powerful test of the crime prevention components that it employs. . . . This is an important book with significant research and policy implications. Its message about policing is one that should be heard by both scholars and policymakers. It provides us with not only guidance from a successful case study but also new and important evidence about the ability of criminal justice agents to do something about crime." --from the Foreword by David Weisburd, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem Timely and informative, Policing Places with Drug Problems focuses on the success of nontraditional, place-oriented drug control strategies in cities across the nation. In her perceptive case study, author Lorraine Green examines SMART (Specialized Multi-Agency Response Team), a program developed by an innovative police practitioner, Sergeant Bob Crawford of the Oakland Police Department. As an alternative to arrest-oriented strategies, SMART engages active enforcement of civil codes and regulatory rules to clean up drug centers, encouraging citizens, landlords, and business owners to work with police in a community effort at drug abatement. In her careful analysis, the author studies the extent to which deviant places can be changed as well as the implications of implementing nontraditional, street-level drug control strategies. A new contribution to policing innovation, this volume concludes with a thoughtful discussion of the challenges that face cities developing alternative drug policing programs. An excellent resource, Policing Places with Drug Problems provides a must-read analysis of place-oriented drug control strategies of particular interest to researchers, practitioners, policymakers, academics and students in criminology, criminal law, policing, urban studies, and social work.

Table of Contents

Foreword - David L Weisburd Introduction Places, Crimes, and Prevention Perspectives Policing Places with Drug Problems The SMART Approach The SMART Program Impact Displacement and Diffusion Effects Conclusions

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top