有人在吗?哈尔格萨的警察、社区和通讯技术

IF 0.6 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Stability-International Journal of Security and Development Pub Date : 2017-06-29 DOI:10.5334/STA.491
A. Hills
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文讨论了信息和通信技术(ICT)与警察社区参与之间的联系,这些环境的特点是移动电话普及率高,但警察的反应率很低。它调查了公众对索马里兰首都哈尔格萨的一个文本警报项目的反应,以探索影响低级警察与社区接触的日常选择。虽然该项目失败了(当地人没有使用手机提醒警察注意需要注意的安全问题),但它提供了对日常警察与社区关系的具体情况的背景见解,以及手机作为一种双向技术的使用,能够在相对安全的城市环境中接触到低收入或边缘化人群。报告关注的是地方期望是如何实现的,而不是应该如何实现的。报告发现,几乎没有证据表明信息通信技术的使用会导致更负责任的警务工作。对警察来说,社区的期望和现有的技术一样影响着他们的行动,而当地的偏好可能会抵消全球化信息通信技术的可用性。从这个角度来看,理解警察-社区参与的关键在于警察满足当地期望所需的知识、技能和资源,而不是国际捐助者的期望。
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Is There Anybody There? Police, Communities and Communications Technology in Hargeisa
This article addresses the connection between information and communications technology (ICT) and police-community engagement in environments characterised by high access to mobile telephones but minimal police response rates. It examines public responses to a text alert project in Somaliland’s capital Hargeisa in order to explore the everyday choices shaping low-level police-community engagement. Although the project failed (local people did not use mobiles to alert the police to security issues requiring attention), it offers contextualised insights into both the specifics of daily police-community relations and the use of mobiles as a two-way technology capable of reaching low-income or marginalised populations in relatively safe urban environments. In focusing on how local expectations are, rather than should be, fulfilled, it finds little evidence to suggest that access to ICT leads to more responsive or accountable policing. For police, activities are shaped as much by community expectations as by the technologies available, and local preferences can offset the availability of globalised ICT. From this perspective, the key to understanding police-community engagement is found in the knowledge, skills and resources police need to fulfil local expectations, rather than the expectations of international donors.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Stability: International Journal of Security & Development is a fundamentally new kind of journal. Open-access, it publishes research quickly and free of charge in order to have a maximal impact upon policy and practice communities. It fills a crucial niche. Despite the allocation of significant policy attention and financial resources to a perceived relationship between development assistance, security and stability, a solid evidence base is still lacking. Research in this area, while growing rapidly, is scattered across journals focused upon broader topics such as international development, international relations and security studies. Accordingly, Stability''s objective is to: Foster an accessible and rigorous evidence base, clearly communicated and widely disseminated, to guide future thinking, policymaking and practice concerning communities and states experiencing widespread violence and conflict. The journal will accept submissions from a wide variety of disciplines, including development studies, international relations, politics, economics, anthropology, sociology, psychology and history, among others. In addition to focusing upon large-scale armed conflict and insurgencies, Stability will address the challenge posed by local and regional violence within ostensibly stable settings such as Mexico, Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia and elsewhere.
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