
Self-Selection Policing
Description
The book concludes with a call for the consideration, development and wider adoption of the self-selection approach, and particularly the identification of other common minor offences which flag concurrent active criminality. The authors make important suggestions for the progression of SSP research and practice, including the identification of barriers to the implementation of the approach in wider police thinking, practice and policy. Practical guidance is also provided for those thinking of developing, testing and implementing the approach. In doing so, the book will be of particular interest for policing practitioners, as well as students and scholars of policing and crime control.
Reviews / Votes
"This is an important introductory book for what the authors hope will be an exciting new tool in the police investigator armoury. They are right. The potential for self-selection policing to make a significant difference to the identification and arrest of serious offenders has hardly begun. A must for the professional police officer with an interest in evidence." (Professor Gloria Laycock OBE, Jill Dando Institute of Security and Crime Science, University College London)
"Paradigms of modern, austerity-led policing would suggest that we focus on high harm offences and offenders. Both are hard to argue with - but Roach and Pease do, and persuasively. Police officers know that burglars burgle and car thieves steal cars. Proactive crime teams are built on this basis - shop lifters are left at the bottom of the pile - Roach and Pease challenge these presumptions, persuasively. They romp through criminological theorymaking it accessible to those of us who most need it (police officers). Some of the best researchers are quoted, as well as Jesus himself. They use data to back up assertions, they highlight weaknesses and challenge the practitioner to go out and try to find out what works. The writing is excellent, sometimes bordering sarcastic. It is a rare book in that it is applied, interesting, confounding, full of stories and one that you will want to finish. It will also change how you think and do policing." (Alex Murray, Chief Superintendent West Midlands Police and Deputy Chair for the Society of Evidence- Based Policing)
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Persons
Ken Pease OBE is a Chartered Forensic Psychologist and Visiting Professor at the Jill Dando Institute, University College London and Loughborough University, UK.