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Facts From Fiction: Tactics and Strategies of Addressing Organized Crime and Organized Criminals

NCJ Number
194000
Author(s)
Margaret E. Beare
Date Published
June 2000
Length
12 pages
Annotation
This presentation critically examines policing strategies in Canada and discusses areas of inefficiency in the organization of policing for law enforcement related to organized crime and transnational crime.
Abstract
The discussion argues that policing is in crisis in Canada and that some of the cause of this crisis may relate indirectly to the role of private police. Indicators of the crises include changing and tightening linkages between the police and the media; apparently increasing levels of police corruption along with demands for less accountability, greater police powers, and a stronger union voice; and management issues that appear to result in policy changes without strategies. Particular areas of concern in relation to inefficiencies in policing include the deployment of police officers, collaboration across police agencies and strategic intelligence sharing, promotion and recognition within police agencies, and the potential needs for a separate organized crime commission and a police corruption commission. Finally, the police should use a human security perspective and endorse strategies that include non-enforcement alternative approaches to addressing either transnational crimes or the adverse impacts of transnational crimes.