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National Survey of Investigations in the Community Policing Context, 1997
This survey collected descriptive information from
municipal police departments and sheriffs offices across the United
States to determine whether the departments had implemented community
policing, how their investigative functions were organized, and the
ways in which their investigative organizational structure may have
been modified to accommodate a community policing approach. The
research project involved a national mail survey of municipal police
departments and sheriffs offices in all jurisdictions with populations
of more than 50,000 and 100 or more sworn officers. The survey was
mailed in the late fall of 1997. Data contain responses from 405
municipal departments and 196 sheriffs offices. Questionnaires were
similar but were modified depending on whether they were sent to
municipal or sheriffs agencies. Data generated by the questionnaires
provide descriptive information about the agencies, including agency
type, state, size of population served, number of full-time and
part-time sworn and civilian personnel, number of auxiliary and rescue
personnel, number of detectives, whether the sworn personnel were
represented by a bargaining unit, and if the agency was
accredited. Respondents reported whether community policing had been
implemented and, if so, identified various features that described
community policing as it was structured in their agency, including
year implementation began, number of sworn personnel with assignments
that included community policing activities, and if someone was
specifically responsible for overseeing community policing activities
or implementation. Also elicited was information about the
organization of the investigative function, including number of sworn
personnel assigned specifically to the investigative/detective
function, the organizational structure of this function, location and
assignment of investigators or the investigative function,
specialization of detectives/investigators, their pay scale compared
to patrol officers, their relationship with patrol officers, and their
chain-of-command. Finally, respondents reported whether the
investigative structure or function had been modified to accommodate a
community policing approach, and if so, the year the changes were
first implemented.
Complete Metadata
| bureauCode |
[ "011:21" ] |
|---|---|
| dataQuality | false |
| identifier | 3650 |
| issued | 2001-12-14T00:00:00 |
| language |
[ "eng" ] |
| programCode |
[ "011:060" ] |