The Critical Difference™
K. C. Poulin, Critical Intervention Services
Charles P. Nemeth, California University of Pennsylvania
Publisher: California University of Pennsylvania Publishing –
Institute for Public Law and Policy
Status: Release date November 2004
The Prevention Agency, (ISBN – 0-9759556-0-8, $29.95) by K.C. Poulin, CEO, Critical Intervention Services, Tampa, Fla., and Charles P. Nemeth JD, Ph.D., Director of the Institute for Law & Public Policy, Graduate Criminal Justice and Legal Studies and Program Development, at California University of Pa.’s Pittsburgh Center, was published this month, November 2004. The work, the second collaboration between Poulin and Nemeth, proposes creating innovative approaches to crime control, reducing the level of victimization, and in turn, elevating the quality of life within high crime communities. Using a partnership between private, public and non-profit sectors and resources, the authors propose a new organization whose aim is to coordinate resources and public safety initiatives to transform the high crime community.
The Prevention Agency posits a new world order of policing distressed communities. Using private sector justice professionals, in a pre-eminent and even dominant position as compared to the public law enforcement superstructure, shakes up the status quo. The text offers up this innovative organization as an alternative for communities and their beleaguered residents. The Prevention Agency, an uncanny blend of private, entrepreneurial, community and public resources, delivers not only change in how things are done, but also results which communities under siege can only presently dream of.
Creating innovative approaches to crime control, reducing the level of victimization, and elevating the quality of life within high crime communities are the chief aims of this monograph. It is self evident that public safety measures and public law enforcement tactics have only partially succeeded in the restoration of peace and tranquility in the high crime community. It is equally apparent that the vacuum and disparity in the quality of life in the high crime community, as opposed to more affluent and safer sectors, continues to accelerate. The chasm widens and the high crime community, suffering from much pathology, cries for assistance. High crime communities have special needs that traditional law enforcement only satisfy in part. The policing focus must shift – the status quo can no longer apply. Indeed, the revolution may already be underway. Trends like “privatization,” “civilianization” and “community” finally hold legislative attention.
In high crime communities, the approach needs to be not only radical, but revolutionary. From every angle the formula must change, whether it be the effective coordination of resources, the redefinition of public safety, the transformation of policing goals and objectives, and the implementation of operational methodologies. Everything must be reevaluated.
Preface
Dedication
Acknowledgements
About the Authors
The High Crime Community: History, Status Quo and Future Salvation
High Crime Communities and Public Safety: Alienation and Estrangement
High Crime Community Pathology: Crime, Victimization and Structural Change
Alienation
Disintegration and Social Capital
Distintegration and the Communal Quality of Life
High Crime Communities: Hope, Salvation and Reconstruction
Philosophies of Prevention in High Crime Communities
The Concept of a Prevention Agency
The Prevention Agency
The Prevention Agency: Qualities and Characteristics
The Prevention Agency Blends a Public/Private Design
The Prevention Agency’s Philosophy of Deployment
The Prevention Agency Philosophy of Decentralization
The Prevention Agency Serves as a Center for Community Information and Analysis
The Prevention Agency Educates the Public
The Prevention Agency Revitalizes Communities
Economic Development 55 Environmental Development
Security and the Community Protection Detachment
Relationship Building and Development
The Prevention Agency: Hierarchy and Structure
The Prevention Agency: Organization and Function
Executive Committee
Liaison and Research Committee
Community Advisory Committee
Neighborhood Revitalization Taskforce
Community Education Team
The Prevention Agency and Public Safety
Juvenile Task Force
Crime Prevention Group
Anti-Crime Specialist Section
Community Protection Officers
Guiding Principles for Community Protection Officers
CPO Principle #1: Deter Crime
CPO Principle #2: Detect Issues
CPO Principle #3: Defuse Issues
CPO Principle #4: Defend the Community
Conclusion
Notes
Appendix A
Appendix B
Bibliography
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