Resilience Policing: An Emerging Response to Shifting Harm Landscapes

View/ Open
File version
Accepted Manuscript (AM)
Author(s)
Mutongwizo, Tariro
Holley, Cameron
Shearing, Clifford
Simpson, Nicholas
Year published
2019
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This article situates contemporary developments in policing in the context of an emerging cross-disciplinary focus on ‘resilience’. We argue that an inchoate reimagining of how police, as security professionals, are engaging, and might engage, in the governance of safety with communities in response to emerging ‘harmscapes’ might be, and should be, conceptualized as ‘resilience policing’. We situate our analysis within the context of developments in community policing.This article situates contemporary developments in policing in the context of an emerging cross-disciplinary focus on ‘resilience’. We argue that an inchoate reimagining of how police, as security professionals, are engaging, and might engage, in the governance of safety with communities in response to emerging ‘harmscapes’ might be, and should be, conceptualized as ‘resilience policing’. We situate our analysis within the context of developments in community policing.
View less >
View less >
Journal Title
Policing
Funder(s)
ARC
Grant identifier(s)
DP170100281
Copyright Statement
© 2019 Oxford University Press. This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Policing following peer review. The definitive publisher-authenticated version Resilience Policing: An Emerging Response to Shifting Harm Landscapes and Reshaping Community Policing, Policing is available online at: 10.1093/police/paz033
Note
This publication has been entered into Griffith Research Online as an Advanced Online Version.
Subject
Criminology
Criminological theories
resilience; policing; harmscapes; community policing; security