Description
Police strategies often develop from custom and practice without guidance from empirical research. Police officers often make their decisions based upon information and tactics with which they are the most familiar and comfortable. Choosing between available strategies and other alternatives can be improved through research and evaluation. One area of policing in which this is especially true is pursuit driving, which may be the deadliest weapon in a police officer's arsenal.
Using the analogy between improper use of firearms and improper pursuit driving, Alpert and Dunham analyze the police car as a potentially dangerous weapon. The book is based upon information gathered over several years in Dade County (Miami), Florida. Included are the details of deaths, injuries, and property damage. Also reported are the arrests and apprehensions of felony suspects. The data are presented not to scare citizens, but to assist them, members of the law enforcement community, and politicians to understand more clearly the role of pursuit in policing and crime control. Pursuit needs to be discussed as a deterrent and crime-fighting strategy, and felony arrests resulting from successful pursuit must be included to compute a cost-benefit analysis. By offering a view of police pursuit that has been heretofore unavailable, the authors hope their empirical data will replace unsupported opinion and media sensationalism as information on which to create or modify pursuit policies and legal standards.Author: Geoffrey P. Alpert, Roger G. Dunham
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published: 06/26/1990
Pages: 200
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.03lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.63d
ISBN13: 9780313272615
ISBN10: 0313272611
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Criminology
- Political Science | Public Policy | General
- Law | General
About the Author
GEOFFREY P. ALPERT is a Professor in the College of Criminal Justice and a Research Professor in the Institute of Public Affairs at the University of South Carolina. He is the co-author, with Roger Dunham, of Policing Multi-Ethnic Neighborhoods (Greenwood Press, 1988), Policing Urban America (1988), and Critical Issues in Policing (1989).
ROGER G. DUNHAM is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Miami, Florida. He has published widely in the areas of deviance and evaluation research along with his works Policing Multi-Ethnic Neighborhoods (1988), Policing Urban America (1988), and Critical Issues in Policing (1989) with Geoffrey Alpert.