情报先导治安

IF 2 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Trends and Issues in Crime and Criminal Justice Pub Date : 2016-04-14 DOI:10.4324/9781315717579
J. Ratcliffe
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Adam Graycar Director Since the 1990s, \"intelligence-led policing\" (also known as intelligence-driven policing\") has entered the lexicon of modern policing, especially in the UK and more recently Australia. Yet even with the ability of new ideas and innovation to spread throughout the policing world at the click of a mouse, there is still a lack of clarity among many in law enforcement as to what intelligence-led policing is, what it aims to achieve, and how it is supposed to operate. This can be seen in recent inspection reports of Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) in the UK (HMIC 2001, 2002), and in the lack of clarity regarding intelligence-led policing in the United States. A recent summit in March 2002 of over 120 criminal intelligence experts from across the US, funded by the US government and organised by the International Association of Chiefs of Police, may become a turning point in policing within the US. The participants called for a National Intelligence Plan, with one of the core recommendations being to \"promote intelligence-led policing through a common understanding of criminal intelligence and its usefulness\" (IACP 2002, p. v). The aspirations of the summit are considerable, but what is unclear from the summit report is a sound understanding of the aims of intelligence-led policing and its relationship to crime reduction. As intelligence-led policing is now a term in common usage within Australian law enforcement (a search of web pages and media releases found the term \"intelligence-led\" in all Australian police sites and the web site of the new Australian Crime Commission), it is timely to consider the origins of intelligence-led policing, the crime reduction levers it aims to pull, and the limitations and possibilities for this type of operational practice. Origins of Intelligence-led Policing Intelligence-led policing entered the police lexicon at some time around the early 1990s. As Gill (1998) has noted, the origins of intelligence-led policing are a little indistinct, but the earliest references to it originate in the UK where a seemingly inexorable rise in crime during the late 1980s and early 1990s coincided with increasing calls for police to be more effective and to be more cost-efficient. The driving forces for this move to a new strategy were both external and internal to policing. External drivers included an inability of the traditional, reactive model of policing to cope with the rapid changes in globalisation which have increased opportunities for transnational organised crime and removed physical and technological barriers across the policing domain. In the new \"risk society\" (Ericson & Haggerty 1997) the police were seen as the source of risk management data for a range of external institutions. With such an influence beyond the boundaries of law enforcement, it was never going to be long before the \"new public management\" drive to increase efficiency in public agencies reached the police. At the same time there was an internal recognition that changes were taking place in the dynamic relationship between the private security industry and the public police. …","PeriodicalId":45134,"journal":{"name":"Trends and Issues in Crime and Criminal Justice","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":2.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-04-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Intelligence-Led Policing\",\"authors\":\"J. Ratcliffe\",\"doi\":\"10.4324/9781315717579\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This paper is timely, given that policing is currently going through a period of significant change in both operational tactics and organisational structures. 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引用次数: 5

摘要

鉴于目前警务工作正在经历一段行动策略和组织结构发生重大变化的时期,这篇论文是及时的。减少犯罪和改变短期和长期警务战略的新想法正在进行中。以情报为主导的警务代表了最近的一种方法,是当前“犯罪控制理念和警务实践的转变”中较为普遍的一种(Maguire 2000)。令人惊讶的是,鉴于“情报主导的警务”一词的广泛使用,对一线警官和警察管理人员来说,它的实际含义仍然相当混乱。本文介绍了以情报为主导的警务,并讨论了一些相关的限制和机会。自20世纪90年代以来,“情报主导的警务”(也称为情报驱动的警务)已经进入了现代警务的词汇,特别是在英国和最近的澳大利亚。然而,即使新想法和创新能够通过鼠标点击传播到整个警务世界,执法部门的许多人仍然不清楚什么是情报主导的警务,它的目标是什么,以及它应该如何运作。这可以从英国女王陛下的警察督察局(HMIC)最近的检查报告(HMIC 2001, 2002)中看到,也可以从美国情报主导的警务缺乏透明度中看到。2002年3月,由美国政府资助、国际警察局长协会(International Association of Chiefs of Police)组织的、来自美国各地的120多名刑事情报专家参加的峰会可能成为美国警务的一个转折点。与会者呼吁制定一项国家情报计划,其中一项核心建议是“通过对刑事情报及其有用性的共同理解来促进情报主导的警务工作”(IACP 2002, p. v)。首脑会议的愿望是相当大的,但从首脑会议报告中不清楚的是对情报主导的警务目标及其与减少犯罪的关系的合理理解。由于以情报为主导的警务现在是澳大利亚执法部门普遍使用的一个术语(搜索网页和媒体发布,在所有澳大利亚警察网站和新澳大利亚犯罪委员会的网站上都发现了“情报为主导”一词),现在是时候考虑以情报为主导的警务的起源,它旨在减少犯罪的杠杆,以及这种类型的行动实践的局限性和可能性。情报主导型警务在20世纪90年代初左右进入了警察词汇。正如吉尔(1998)所指出的,情报主导警务的起源有点模糊,但最早的参考文献起源于英国,在20世纪80年代末和90年代初,犯罪率似乎不可阻挡地上升,与此同时,越来越多的人呼吁警察更有效率,更节约成本。这一新策略的驱动力来自警务的内部和外部。外部驱动因素包括传统的被动警务模式无法应对全球化的快速变化,这种变化增加了跨国有组织犯罪的机会,消除了整个警务领域的物理和技术障碍。在新的“风险社会”(Ericson & Haggerty 1997)中,警察被视为一系列外部机构风险管理数据的来源。由于这种影响超出了执法部门的范围,用不了多久,提高公共机构效率的“新公共管理”运动就会波及警察部门。与此同时,内部认识到,私人保安业和公共警察之间的动态关系正在发生变化。…
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Intelligence-Led Policing
This paper is timely, given that policing is currently going through a period of significant change in both operational tactics and organisational structures. New ideas in crime reduction and changes to short- and long-term policing strategies are underway. Intelligence-led policing represents a recent approach and is one of the more prevalent of the current "shifts in crime control philosophy and policing practice" (Maguire 2000). Surprisingly, given the wide distribution of the term "intelligence-led policing", considerable confusion remains in regard to its actual meaning to both front-line officers and police management. This paper provides an introduction to intelligence-led policing and discusses some of the related limitations and opportunities. Adam Graycar Director Since the 1990s, "intelligence-led policing" (also known as intelligence-driven policing") has entered the lexicon of modern policing, especially in the UK and more recently Australia. Yet even with the ability of new ideas and innovation to spread throughout the policing world at the click of a mouse, there is still a lack of clarity among many in law enforcement as to what intelligence-led policing is, what it aims to achieve, and how it is supposed to operate. This can be seen in recent inspection reports of Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) in the UK (HMIC 2001, 2002), and in the lack of clarity regarding intelligence-led policing in the United States. A recent summit in March 2002 of over 120 criminal intelligence experts from across the US, funded by the US government and organised by the International Association of Chiefs of Police, may become a turning point in policing within the US. The participants called for a National Intelligence Plan, with one of the core recommendations being to "promote intelligence-led policing through a common understanding of criminal intelligence and its usefulness" (IACP 2002, p. v). The aspirations of the summit are considerable, but what is unclear from the summit report is a sound understanding of the aims of intelligence-led policing and its relationship to crime reduction. As intelligence-led policing is now a term in common usage within Australian law enforcement (a search of web pages and media releases found the term "intelligence-led" in all Australian police sites and the web site of the new Australian Crime Commission), it is timely to consider the origins of intelligence-led policing, the crime reduction levers it aims to pull, and the limitations and possibilities for this type of operational practice. Origins of Intelligence-led Policing Intelligence-led policing entered the police lexicon at some time around the early 1990s. As Gill (1998) has noted, the origins of intelligence-led policing are a little indistinct, but the earliest references to it originate in the UK where a seemingly inexorable rise in crime during the late 1980s and early 1990s coincided with increasing calls for police to be more effective and to be more cost-efficient. The driving forces for this move to a new strategy were both external and internal to policing. External drivers included an inability of the traditional, reactive model of policing to cope with the rapid changes in globalisation which have increased opportunities for transnational organised crime and removed physical and technological barriers across the policing domain. In the new "risk society" (Ericson & Haggerty 1997) the police were seen as the source of risk management data for a range of external institutions. With such an influence beyond the boundaries of law enforcement, it was never going to be long before the "new public management" drive to increase efficiency in public agencies reached the police. At the same time there was an internal recognition that changes were taking place in the dynamic relationship between the private security industry and the public police. …
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