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687 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 8 (2020)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0687 and id is 1 raw text is: Evidence-Based
Policing and
Fatal Police
Shootings:
Promise,
Problems, and
Prospects
By
LAWRENCE W. SHERMAN

The promise of evidence-based policing is to reduce
harm with better research for targeting, testing, and
tracking police actions. The problems of using
evidence-based policing to reduce harm are found in
the emotional dimensions of ethics and risk. These
problems are most pronounced with fatal police shoot-
ings, where the risks of injury to American police are
often framed as a zero-sum choice in relation to the
ethics of taking citizens' lives. Yet evidence-based polic-
ing offers good prospects for reframing the debate over
fatal police shootings, in ways that could reduce harm to
both police and citizens. This volume offers substantial
new evidence for initiatives at all levels of U.S. govern-
ment that could help to save lives in police encounters
with citizens. Putting that evidence to work remains the
major challenge facing the American police.
Keywords: evidence-based policing; fatal police shoot-
ings; guns; race; normal accident theory;
police recruitment; training and govern-
ance; emergency medicine; mental health
round 7:30 a.m. on a recent Monday in a
large city, groups of young protesters placed
food crates and other obstacles on main roads to
block the rush hour traffic. When two traffic
officers arrived, they ran at the protesters to
move them up to the sidewalk. When one
Lawrence W. Sherman is director of the Cambridge
Centre for Evidence-Based Policing, where he serves as
editor-in-chief of the Cambridge Journal of Evidence-
Based Policing. He is also Wo on Professor of Criminology
Emeritus at the University of Cambridge Institute of
Criminology, where he is chair of the Cambridge Police
Executive Program. Until 2019, he serredl as a distin-
guished university professor at the University of Maryland.
He was president of the American Academy of Political
and Social Science ao editor of The ANNALS from 2001
to 2005 and was elected a Thorsten Sellin Fellow of the
Academy in 2009. He edited his first volume of The
ANNALS in 1980, on Police and Violence. In 2017, he
receivred Yale Universitys Wilbur Lucius Cross Medal, in
nrognition of his work as a pioneer of evidence-based
practices.
Correspondence: s434@camb.ac.uk
DOI: 10.1177/0002716220902073

ANNALS, AAPSS, 687, January 2020

8

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