Wir verwenden Cookies und Analyse-Tools, um die Nutzerfreundlichkeit der Internet-Seite zu verbessern und für Marketingzwecke. Wenn Sie fortfahren, diese Seite zu verwenden, nehmen wir an, dass Sie damit einverstanden sind. Zur Datenschutzerklärung.
Policing Ethically
Details
What does the phrase 'police ethics' mean? What does 'policing ethically' entail? This book provides answers to these questions and proposes an ethical tool-kit to help evaluate the making of ethically-sound decisions by policing officials.
At a time when much in UK policing is the subject of intense public and media scrutiny, there prevails a practitioner discourse about policing ethically that is ongoing formally in police ethics committee discussions, and probably informally in station offices, canteens, classrooms, and police vehicles. Since January 2024, these conversations have added emphasis with the publication of the College of Policing's revised Code of Ethics with which policing practitioners in England and Wales are coming to grips. This book explores thinking about policing ethically for those who have to use and implement the ideas - to those who, when law and policy is silent on the matter before them, nevertheless have to make a justifiable decision and act upon it.
Applicable to policing generally, not just to the UK, Part 1 of this book presents conceptual contextualization for thinking about policing ethically. Following which, Part 2 considers practical implications of policing ethically.
Some of the key topics that the book covers are as follows:
- Discussions of managing power and vulnerability
- Implementing frontline ethics in practice
- The process of making ethically informed decisions
- Considerations around ethics and the use of artificial intelligence by policing practitioners
- Prerequisites to ethical leadership
- Considering "public interest" in relation to policing ethically
- Risk management as a moral obligation
Drawing upon the policing practitioner and policymaking experience of the authors, this book will be of interest and use to all those involved in delivering policing: constables of all ranks (student, probationary, and experienced), policing community support officers, professional support staff, policing ethics committee members, and policymakers. The book is also a contribution to the wider academic literature on policing and ethics, and will be of interest not only to policing ethicists and ethnographers but also to students and policymakers in the fields of criminology, sociology, and governance.
Autorentext
Before taking up an academic career, Clive Harfield served for twenty years in various UK police organizations in local, national, and transnational policing roles. As an Associate Professor he has taught and researched at the University of Wollongong, NSW, (criminal law, transnational crime prevention); the University of the Sunshine Coast, Qld, (cybersecurity and cyber-investigation ethics); the Australian Catholic University (criminology and criminal justice); and he has been an Adjunct Professor at the University of Queensland (law). In designing and delivering criminal justice sector capacity-building support for law enforcement practitioners and policy-makers, he has worked in Bangladesh (counter-terrorist financing) and Papua New Guinea (anti-corruption and organizational integrity), funded by Australian federal government foreign aid programs. In the police education and research arena, he has undertaken the roles of Visiting Lecturer at the Police University College, Norway; International Visiting Fellow at Bath Spa University, UK; and Fulbright Research Fellow at Georgetown University, Washington DC (USA).
Professor Emeritus Allyson Macvean's distinguished career began in the Serious and Organized Crime Unit of the Home Office, from where she moved into academia, establishing the John Grieve Centre for Policing and Community Safety at Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College (now Buckinghamshire Chilterns University). As Professor of Policing and Criminology, and Co-Director of Bath Spa University's Centre for Leadership, Ethics and Professional Practice, Professor Macvean worked closely with the Royal Marines to help re-establish ethical culture and ethics training; work which, in turn, led to her being commissioned to review ethical climate, ethical awareness, and ethical leadership across the five fighting arms of the Naval Service. She has been instrumental in the establishment of police ethics committees in England, Wales, and Scotland, and was a founding member of the UK Police Ethics group (now the UK Police National Ethics Committee). In 2019, for her services to ethical leadership and ethical policing, she was awarded the Order of the British Empire.
Klappentext
What does the phrase 'police ethics' mean? What does 'policing ethically' entail? This book provides answers to these questions and proposes an ethical tool-kit to help evaluate the making of ethically-sound decisions by policing officials.
Inhalt
Introduction, Part 1 - Thinking about policing ethically, 1. Purpose, ethos, and ethics, 2. Ethics, rights, and dignity, 3. A professional ethic for policing?, 4. Managing power, 5. Managing vulnerability, 6. The public interest(s), Part 2 - Policing ethically in practice, 7. Codifying ethics, 8. Making frontline ethics work, 9. Ethical leadership, 10. Ethically informed decision-making, 11. Managing risk as moral obligation, 12. Policing ethically
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09780367467302
- Sprache Englisch
- Größe H234mm x B156mm
- Jahr 2025
- EAN 9780367467302
- Format Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
- ISBN 978-0-367-46730-2
- Titel Policing Ethically
- Autor Harfield Clive , Allyson Macvean
- Gewicht 360g
- Herausgeber Routledge
- Anzahl Seiten 204