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Part I The Nature and Setting of Police Administration

Part I The Nature and Setting of Police Administration. Chapter 1 Introduction to Police Administration. Learning Objectives. Understand the importance that administration plays in the operation of a police department.

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Part I The Nature and Setting of Police Administration

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  1. Part IThe Nature and Setting of Police Administration Chapter 1 Introduction toPolice Administration

  2. Learning Objectives • Understand the importance that administration plays in the operation of a police department. • Develop a familiarity with the roles of management and organization in police administration. • Discuss the role of supervisors, commanders, and administrators in the police organization. • Know the different goals of police organizations and how police departments attempt to fulfill goals and objectives. • Understand the different historical eras of policing and how the police functioned within each of these eras.

  3. How the Police Is aUnique Institution • Work • Diversity of roles and tasks • Charged with a lot of responsibilities • Authority • Can arrest and use deadly force • Availability • Expected to operate 24/7

  4. What Is an Organization? • A group of people working together to accomplish a goal • The goal legitimizes the organization. • Suboptimization occurs when individuals concentrate on their own objectives without considering the overall goal. • Consciously coordinated • Implies management • Social entity • Composed of people who interact with each other • Relatively identifiable boundary • Jurisdiction or service population

  5. The Police Departmentas an Organization • Line personnel • Perform fundamental police activities or supervise them • Staff personnel • Help line personnel by providing support or assistance • Boundaries • The department’s goals and the people it serves

  6. What Is Administration? The general managing and organizing that occurs at the highest levels of an organization Establishes the department’s purposes, mission, policies, and procedures Develops ways of controlling the department so that personnel follow the guideposts

  7. Activities Associatedwith Administration Planning Organizing Staffing Directing Coordinating Reporting Budgeting

  8. What Is Organization? The structuring and staffing of people in the department Facilitates working relationships and goal attainment

  9. What Is Management? The processes administrators, middle managers, and supervisors use to give an organization direction Used to influence people to work toward organizational goals The actions taken by administrators to implement decisions and policies Consists of activities designed to induce cooperation and facilitate work

  10. Management Levels • The typical police organization resembles a military structure • Administrators (chief, assistant chief, majors) • Commanders or midlevel managers (captains and lieutenants) • Supervisors (sergeants)

  11. The Role of Managers • Assist employees by providing the equipment and technical support necessary for the employee to function effectively • Clarify tasks and guide the employee to become more effective • Give direction • Issue policies, procedures, and orders • Develop employees

  12. Aspects of Management • Organizational maintenance • Activities that maintain the department’s ability to respond to public needs • Includes: staffing, training, and organizational development • Enables the department to be in a better position to respond to situations • Adaptation • Public expectations and needs are constantly changing. • The department must change and adapt with the public. • Effective administrators are understanding visionaries.

  13. How Police Departments Differ From Other Organizations • Only the police possess legitimate arrest power and authority within our society. • Police departments are government organizations. • Public organizations exist within a political environment. • Governmental agencies do not have a profit motive. • The government is involved in the provision of services, not goods. • Bureaucratic governmental rules stymie creativity and flexibility. • Government has limited, inflexible resources. • A government must answer to its many and diverse citizens.

  14. Problems of the Service Industry Intangible product Must have built-in flexibility for responding to differing service needs Higher degree of customer participation Must have immediate response timing Labor-intensive

  15. Police Departments’ Mission A mission statement gives the department’s purpose. Notifies and educates people about the department’s values Establishes what is important Establishes a yardstick with which to measure successes and failures Serves as a guide to establishing training and other socialization programs

  16. The Roles Served byPolice Departments • Order maintenance • Focus on order by intervening in fights, etc. • Service • Assisting citizens with problems • Law enforcement • Focus on arrests and citations

  17. What Are Goals? The specific results or achievements toward which the police organization directs its efforts Conditions or benchmarks the organization desires to achieve State of affairs the organization strives to realize Directly tied to the mission and roles of the organization

  18. Police Mission in the Political Era • Characterized as political, decentralized arms of the local politicians • Politicians dictated what laws were enforced, who was hired and who was promoted. • Primary roles of police: • Order maintenance • Provision of services to community

  19. Police Mission in theProgressive Reform Era Shift from order maintenance and provision of services to law enforcement or crime fighting Police given sole responsibility for crime reduction Police used unethical means to meet public expectations Police and public became adversaries

  20. Police Mission in theProfessional Era Police became professional law enforcers Activities outside of law enforcement were viewed as chores Service role deemphasized

  21. Police Mission in theCommunity Relations Era • Responded to increased violence by deepening role as crime fighters • Emphasis placed on arrests, citations and restoring order through force • Created isolation from community • Large minority population distrusted police and were uncooperative when confronted by police. • Crime is usually highest in minority communities. • Police departments implemented public and community relations programs.

  22. The Return to Law and Order Community relations programs of the ‘60s and ‘70s evolved into crime prevention programs. Drug and crime wars persisted. Some police began to recognize that law enforcement—in combination with social services—was a more effective strategy.

  23. The Community Policing Era Embraced by politicians and police toward the end of the ’80s and into the’90s Uses participatory management, geographic stability of assignment, and community involvement Police engaged in diverse programs and tactics with the objective of developing a partnership with citizens to solve crimes

  24. Beyond 9/11: Policing and Homeland Security For a police agency to be successful at catching terrorists, it must have positive relations with citizens and communities. Local police are working more closely with state and federal agencies to collect intelligence and coordinate responses to threats. Police departments are increasing their own intelligence operations. Police are focusing on critical infrastructure vital to government and business.

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