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Practice versus Paradigm: How Today's Police Departments Define Community Policing
Police Studies: The International Review of Police Development (1996)
  • Joanne Ziembo-Vogl, Grand Valley State University
  • DeVere Woods, Indiana State University
Abstract
While many believe that community policing has advanced beyond the defining stages, conflict still exists between community policing as envisioned by academics and theorists and community policing as interpreted and practiced by police organizations. Why is there so much disparity between the theory and application of community policing? Part of the answer lies in the differing utility the concept holds for practitioners and researchers. Analyzed within the precepts of the Trojanowicz Paradigm, content analyses of community policing job descriptions and definitions were performed on data obtained during a 1994 national survey of police departments conducted by Trojanowicz, Woods, et al. Results were surprising, yet consistent with many case studies that trace implementation problems to the failure of the larger organization to incorporate the community policing philosophy.
Publication Date
1996
Citation Information
Joanne Ziembo-Vogl and DeVere Woods. "Practice versus Paradigm: How Today's Police Departments Define Community Policing" Police Studies: The International Review of Police Development Vol. 19 Iss. 3 (1996)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/joanne_ziembovogl/13/