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5 Police Prac. & Res. 1 (2004)

handle is hein.journals/gppr5 and id is 1 raw text is: 






Police Practice and Research,                                          Routledge
Vol. 5, No. 1, March 2004, pp. 01-03                                F  Taylor&FrisGop






From the Editor-in-Chief



Highlights of the Contents of Volume 5, Number 1

This first issue of Volume 5 of Police Practice & Research: An International Journal
(PPR)  celebrates a new feature in the journal: Instead of the usual four issues a year,
there will be five issues in Volume 5 in 2004 and in subsequent volumes. The decision
for increasing an issue has been made in order to enable the PPR Board of Editors to
present innovative, interesting, and thought-provoking material to our readers in a
more timely manner. The editors willbe looking forward to the reception of this exper-
iment by our global community  of readers.
  The  current issue is a major contribution to the PPR's mission of strengthening the
collaboration between research and practice in policing with a view to strengthening
the police capacity to serve the people. With the analysis of his data from Australian
cities like Canberra and Sydney, Jerry H. Ratcliffe ('The Hotspot Matrix: A Framework
for the Spatio-Temporal Targeting of Crime  Reduction'), discusses 'the techniques
used to identify the spatial and temporal components of crime hotspots, and utilizes
these methods to identify three broad categories of temporal hotspot and three broad
categories of spatial hotspot.' He demonstrates abundant enthusiasm in his research
because 'any discussion of crime hotspots is of clear interest to police managers, inter-
ested as they are in devising suitable strategies for crime reduction in high crime areas.'
Ratcliffe is, no doubt, aware that 'Academia does sometimes struggle to convey its
message to practitioners, and this paper attempts to reduce the complexity of space-
time high-volume crime interactions to a practical level.'
  Analyzing calls for service data from three Caribbean nations, Barbados, Trinidad
and Tobago,  and Jamaica, Richard R. Bennett ('Calling for Service: Mobilization of
the Police Across Sociocultural Environments') argues that the social and political
context of the jurisdiction determines, at the margins, the nature of citizen call for
service.' He adds that 'for non-serious crime and other services, citizens' calls for
police services are predicated upon the nature of relationship between the citizenry
and the police.' The 'implications' are that the police 'must convince the populace
that they have the legitimate needs of the citizens at heart.' In this regard 'developing
nations with a recent colonial past are at a disadvantage' because 'not only must they
overcome  their colonial heritage and the ruling elites' expectation of service and
protection, but they must also overcome  citizens' negative attitudes and ingrained
distrust.'


ISSN 1561-4263 (print)/ISSN 1477-271X online/04/01003-3 @ 2004 Taylor & Francis Ltd
DOI: 10.180/1561426042000191297

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