Search IACP
Number of Results: 4934
Empathy: What Is It, Exactly? - Police Chief Magazine
Skip to content Languages Accessibility Police Chief Magazine LOGIN SUBSCRIBE JOIN Linkedin Facebook Instagram X ...
Updated: Views of the Police and Neighborhood Conditions: Evidence of Change in Six Cities Participating in the National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice
...
Strengthening the Relationship Between Law Enforcement and Communities of Color: Developing an Agenda for Action
...
Case Study: Community Input on Unmanned Aerial Systems (Drones), Stockton Police Department
...
Teaching Ethics in the Training Academy: A State-of-the-Art Approach - Police Chief Magazine
The topic of ethics has always been a central feature in police academy training. Recruits throughout the ages have been introduced to core values of the law enforcement profession, including duty, honor, loyalty, public order, justice, protection, and integrity.
Importance of Police-Community Relationships and Resources for Further Reading
...
IACP@Work: IACP Leadership Training Provides a Systematic Approach to Effective Decision-Making - Police Chief Magazine
IACP courses teach participants how to analyze leadership situations, explain problems, and develop actions to reinforce what is going well and address what is not. The first way IACP trainers teach class participants to do this is by employing the Leader Thought Process, a systematic approach to making effective decisions.
Best and Promising Practices: Trauma Informed Community Building: A Model for Strengthening Communities in Trauma Affected Neighborhoods
...
A Crisis of Trust: A National Police Foundation Report to the Los Angeles Board of Police Commissioners on the Los Angeles Police Department Response to First Amendment Assemblies and Protests Occurring May 27 – June 7, 2020
...
Video Evidence: Don't Take It for Granted - Police Chief Magazine
In recent years, policy makers have dedicated a lot of attention to cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, and privacy, especially in relation to video surveillance and public safety. While these are very important topics, some attention should also be dedicated to the more fundamental issues that often go unnoticed and relate to the proper understanding of image and video evidence, both during investigations and in court. The intention of this article is to raise awareness about the video evidence’s challenges as “you don’t know what you don’t know”: the very first step in addressing a problem is realizing that you have one.
