Police policy shifts after 9/11 : from community policing to Homeland Security: a New York case study / Mohsen Alizadeh.

Titolo

Police policy shifts after 9/11 : from community policing to Homeland Security: a New York case study / Mohsen Alizadeh.

Descrizione

Title from PDF of title page (viewed, Feb. 15, 2021)
This volume addresses the impact of the September 11th terror attacks on funded programs in policing. Comparing New York City's policing, community policing, and homeland security programs, this brief examines twenty-four years of federal grants to identify shifts in policy. Using focusing events and moral panic theories, it posits that 9/11 served as a catalyst to change public policy, moving policing programs in the direction of homeland security. With a before-after-study design, this volume empirically assesses policy shifts to better understand the influence of events and of funding on policing models. This brief will be useful to researchers of policing, law enforcement officials, and policymakers.

Editore

Springer,

Data

Autore di contributo subordinato

SpringerLink (Online service)

Relazione

https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-32123-9

Formato

1 online resource (ix, 49 p.)

Lingua

eng

Tipo

a

Titolo alternativo

Police policy shifts after September 11th : from community policing to Homeland Security: a New York case study

Diritti di accesso

Publisher's Web site. Access restricted to the University of Catania community.

DOI

10.1007/978-3-030-32123-9 doi

ISBN

9783030321222 (print)
9783030321239 (electronic bk.)
3030321231 (electronic bk.)
9783030321222 (print)

Series

SpringerBriefs in Criminology. Policing
SpringerBriefs in criminology. Policing.

Citation

Alizadeh, Mohsen., “Police policy shifts after 9/11 : from community policing to Homeland Security: a New York case study / Mohsen Alizadeh.,” Lex e-books, ultimo accesso il 13 maggio 2024, http://ebooks.unict.it/omeka/items/show/731.