Intelligence-led Policing

Front Cover
Routledge, 2008 - Political Science - 265 pages

What is intelligence-led policing? Who came up with the idea? Where did it come from? How does it relate to other policing paradigms? What distinguishes an intelligence-led approach to crime reduction? How is it designed to have an impact on crime? Does it prevent crime? What is crime disruption? Is intelligence-led policing just for the police? These are questions asked by many police professionals, including senior officers, analysts and operational staff. Similar questions are also posed by students of policing who have witnessed the rapid emergence of intelligence-led policing from its British origins to a worldwide movement. These questions are also relevant to crime prevention practitioners and policymakers seeking long-term crime benefits. The answers to these questions are the subject of this book.

This book brings the concepts, processes and practice of intelligence-led policing into focus, so that students, practitioners and scholars of policing, criminal intelligence and crime analysis can better understand the evolving theoretical and empirical dynamics of this rapidly growing paradigm. The first book of its kind, enhanced by viewpoint contributions from intelligence experts and case studies of police operations, provides a much-needed and timely in-depth synopsis of this emerging movement in a practical and accessible style.

 

Contents

1 Introduction
1
2 Origins of intelligenceled policing
15
3 The magnitude of the crime challenge
42
4 Defining intelligenceled policing
64
5 Analytical frameworks
91
6 Interpreting the criminal environment
115
7 Influencing decisionmakers
141
8 Having an impact on crime
165
9 Evaluating intelligenceled policing
186
10 Challenges for the future
213
References
238
Index
257
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

Jerry Ratcliffe is Professor at the Department of Criminal Justice, Temple University, Philadelphia.

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