Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime : Part 2. Options for World Bank Engagement with Police
Crime and violence impede development and disproportionally impact poor people in many countries across the world. Though crime and violence represent serious problems in many countries, less-developed countries experience particular concentrations...
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Language: | English en_US |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2016
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/04/26294403/addressing-enforcement-gap-counter-crime-investing-public-safety-rule-law-local-development-poor-neighborhoods-vol-2-part-2-options-world-bank-engagement-police http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24415 |
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recordtype |
oai_dc |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
COMMUNITIES CRIMINALITY COMMUNITY RELATIONS URBAN COMMUNITIES RIGHTS CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX ECONOMIC GROWTH URBANIZATION CORRUPT BUSINESS COMMUNITY POLITICS BRIBERY ABUSE POLICE SERVICES POLICE STRUCTURES CRIMINAL LAW ENFORCEMENT GOVERNMENT STRATEGIES GOOD GOVERNANCE SERVICES CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS NEIGHBORHOOD POOR NEIGHBORHOODS LEGAL STATUS HEALTH JUVENILE DELINQUENCY PROSECUTION PROJECTS PROJECT NEIGHBORHOODS CITIES CRIME CORRUPTION COMMUNITY POLICING COURTS INSTITUTIONS STATE COURTS JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT POLICE TRAINING TRAINING PROSECUTORS INTERVENTION CORRUPT PRACTICES COUNSEL MILITARY POLICE MOBILITY PUBLIC SAFETY CITIZEN ADOPTION COMMUNITY LEADERS VIOLENCE CRIME PREVENTION CASES JUDGES ORGANIZATIONS GANGS INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CONFIDENCE INDICATORS PROBLEM ORIENTED POLICING COLONIZATION SERVICE DELIVERY SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT GENDER ISSUES RULE OF LAW MINISTRIES OF JUSTICE MEDIATION POLICE OFFICERS DESIGN JUDICIAL SYSTEM ARRESTS INITIATIVES INTEGRITY ARCHITECTURE ACCOUNTABILITY PROCUREMENT POLICIES TRANSPARENCY URBAN PLANNING POLICE PARTICIPATION CRIMES GENDER BANK POLICE MANAGEMENT JUVENILE OFFENDERS ANTI-CORRUPTION VICTIMS OFFENDERS YOUTH CRIMINOLOGY GOVERNMENT CORRUPTION POLICING DELINQUENCY LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS CRIMINAL JUSTICE ADMINISTRATIVE COURTS POLICY CITIZENS FREE PRESS GOVERNANCE ENFORCEMENT POLICE OFFICER JUSTICE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RIGHTS CRIMINAL JUSTICE PERSONNEL ANTI- CORRUPTION SECURITY POLICE HISTORY CIVIL LAW ORGANIZATION FAVELA POVERTY DISABILITY JUDICIARY COMPLAINT SOCIAL COHESION FACILITIES LAW LEADERSHIP INTERVENTIONS AGREEMENT COMMUNITY INVESTIGATORS STRATEGY PRIVATE SECTOR GROWTH COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY GOVERNMENTS COMMON LAW SAFETY POLITICAL LEADERS JUVENILE JUSTICE SERVICE GROWTH |
spellingShingle |
COMMUNITIES CRIMINALITY COMMUNITY RELATIONS URBAN COMMUNITIES RIGHTS CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX ECONOMIC GROWTH URBANIZATION CORRUPT BUSINESS COMMUNITY POLITICS BRIBERY ABUSE POLICE SERVICES POLICE STRUCTURES CRIMINAL LAW ENFORCEMENT GOVERNMENT STRATEGIES GOOD GOVERNANCE SERVICES CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS NEIGHBORHOOD POOR NEIGHBORHOODS LEGAL STATUS HEALTH JUVENILE DELINQUENCY PROSECUTION PROJECTS PROJECT NEIGHBORHOODS CITIES CRIME CORRUPTION COMMUNITY POLICING COURTS INSTITUTIONS STATE COURTS JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT POLICE TRAINING TRAINING PROSECUTORS INTERVENTION CORRUPT PRACTICES COUNSEL MILITARY POLICE MOBILITY PUBLIC SAFETY CITIZEN ADOPTION COMMUNITY LEADERS VIOLENCE CRIME PREVENTION CASES JUDGES ORGANIZATIONS GANGS INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CONFIDENCE INDICATORS PROBLEM ORIENTED POLICING COLONIZATION SERVICE DELIVERY SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT GENDER ISSUES RULE OF LAW MINISTRIES OF JUSTICE MEDIATION POLICE OFFICERS DESIGN JUDICIAL SYSTEM ARRESTS INITIATIVES INTEGRITY ARCHITECTURE ACCOUNTABILITY PROCUREMENT POLICIES TRANSPARENCY URBAN PLANNING POLICE PARTICIPATION CRIMES GENDER BANK POLICE MANAGEMENT JUVENILE OFFENDERS ANTI-CORRUPTION VICTIMS OFFENDERS YOUTH CRIMINOLOGY GOVERNMENT CORRUPTION POLICING DELINQUENCY LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS CRIMINAL JUSTICE ADMINISTRATIVE COURTS POLICY CITIZENS FREE PRESS GOVERNANCE ENFORCEMENT POLICE OFFICER JUSTICE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RIGHTS CRIMINAL JUSTICE PERSONNEL ANTI- CORRUPTION SECURITY POLICE HISTORY CIVIL LAW ORGANIZATION FAVELA POVERTY DISABILITY JUDICIARY COMPLAINT SOCIAL COHESION FACILITIES LAW LEADERSHIP INTERVENTIONS AGREEMENT COMMUNITY INVESTIGATORS STRATEGY PRIVATE SECTOR GROWTH COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY GOVERNMENTS COMMON LAW SAFETY POLITICAL LEADERS JUVENILE JUSTICE SERVICE GROWTH Gramckow, Heike P. Greene, Jack Marshall, Ineke Barao, Lisa Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime : Part 2. Options for World Bank Engagement with Police |
description |
Crime and violence impede development
and disproportionally impact poor people in many countries
across the world. Though crime and violence represent
serious problems in many countries, less-developed countries
experience particular concentrations, especially those that
are characterized by fragile or less-trusted government
institutions and pervasive insecurity. Under such
circumstances, human, social, political, and economic
development suffers. Research across the globe has shown
that holistic approaches that focus on the entire spectrum
of a government's crime response chain, ranging from
crime prevention to enforcement, tend to have better
outcomes than isolated interventions involving only the
police or other individual government agency. To date, most
of the Bank's investment in efforts to reduce crime
have focused on crime prevention in the form of urban and
social development programs. Investment and policy lending
that support the improvement of police operations to reduce
crime and develop stronger neighborhoods are more limited.
To assist country teams and client counterparts in their
efforts to develop effective, holistic responses against
crime that include the police, justice reform staff in the
Governance Global Practice teamed up with internationally
recognized experts to compile evidence-based good practice
information for developing effective police responses to
crime. The resulting three part publication, titled
Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime: Investing
in Public Safety, the Rule of Law and Local Development in
Poor Neighborhoods outlines the impact of crime and violence
on development and the poor in particular and explains a
proven three-pronged approach to creating police agencies
that work in collaboration with communities and other
government and private service providers to identify crime
problems, develop holistic and inclusive solutions the apply
a restorative justice approach. The publication also
outlines how such approach can be integrated into Bank
projects and client country reform plans. |
format |
Report |
author |
Gramckow, Heike P. Greene, Jack Marshall, Ineke Barao, Lisa |
author_facet |
Gramckow, Heike P. Greene, Jack Marshall, Ineke Barao, Lisa |
author_sort |
Gramckow, Heike P. |
title |
Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime : Part 2. Options for World Bank Engagement with Police |
title_short |
Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime : Part 2. Options for World Bank Engagement with Police |
title_full |
Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime : Part 2. Options for World Bank Engagement with Police |
title_fullStr |
Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime : Part 2. Options for World Bank Engagement with Police |
title_full_unstemmed |
Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime : Part 2. Options for World Bank Engagement with Police |
title_sort |
addressing the enforcement gap to counter crime : part 2. options for world bank engagement with police |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/04/26294403/addressing-enforcement-gap-counter-crime-investing-public-safety-rule-law-local-development-poor-neighborhoods-vol-2-part-2-options-world-bank-engagement-police http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24415 |
_version_ |
1764456661489025024 |
spelling |
okr-10986-244152021-05-25T08:48:15Z Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime : Part 2. Options for World Bank Engagement with Police Gramckow, Heike P. Greene, Jack Marshall, Ineke Barao, Lisa COMMUNITIES CRIMINALITY COMMUNITY RELATIONS URBAN COMMUNITIES RIGHTS CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX ECONOMIC GROWTH URBANIZATION CORRUPT BUSINESS COMMUNITY POLITICS BRIBERY ABUSE POLICE SERVICES POLICE STRUCTURES CRIMINAL LAW ENFORCEMENT GOVERNMENT STRATEGIES GOOD GOVERNANCE SERVICES CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS NEIGHBORHOOD POOR NEIGHBORHOODS LEGAL STATUS HEALTH JUVENILE DELINQUENCY PROSECUTION PROJECTS PROJECT NEIGHBORHOODS CITIES CRIME CORRUPTION COMMUNITY POLICING COURTS INSTITUTIONS STATE COURTS JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT POLICE TRAINING TRAINING PROSECUTORS INTERVENTION CORRUPT PRACTICES COUNSEL MILITARY POLICE MOBILITY PUBLIC SAFETY CITIZEN ADOPTION COMMUNITY LEADERS VIOLENCE CRIME PREVENTION CASES JUDGES ORGANIZATIONS GANGS INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CONFIDENCE INDICATORS PROBLEM ORIENTED POLICING COLONIZATION SERVICE DELIVERY SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT GENDER ISSUES RULE OF LAW MINISTRIES OF JUSTICE MEDIATION POLICE OFFICERS DESIGN JUDICIAL SYSTEM ARRESTS INITIATIVES INTEGRITY ARCHITECTURE ACCOUNTABILITY PROCUREMENT POLICIES TRANSPARENCY URBAN PLANNING POLICE PARTICIPATION CRIMES GENDER BANK POLICE MANAGEMENT JUVENILE OFFENDERS ANTI-CORRUPTION VICTIMS OFFENDERS YOUTH CRIMINOLOGY GOVERNMENT CORRUPTION POLICING DELINQUENCY LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS CRIMINAL JUSTICE ADMINISTRATIVE COURTS POLICY CITIZENS FREE PRESS GOVERNANCE ENFORCEMENT POLICE OFFICER JUSTICE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RIGHTS CRIMINAL JUSTICE PERSONNEL ANTI- CORRUPTION SECURITY POLICE HISTORY CIVIL LAW ORGANIZATION FAVELA POVERTY DISABILITY JUDICIARY COMPLAINT SOCIAL COHESION FACILITIES LAW LEADERSHIP INTERVENTIONS AGREEMENT COMMUNITY INVESTIGATORS STRATEGY PRIVATE SECTOR GROWTH COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY GOVERNMENTS COMMON LAW SAFETY POLITICAL LEADERS JUVENILE JUSTICE SERVICE GROWTH Crime and violence impede development and disproportionally impact poor people in many countries across the world. Though crime and violence represent serious problems in many countries, less-developed countries experience particular concentrations, especially those that are characterized by fragile or less-trusted government institutions and pervasive insecurity. Under such circumstances, human, social, political, and economic development suffers. Research across the globe has shown that holistic approaches that focus on the entire spectrum of a government's crime response chain, ranging from crime prevention to enforcement, tend to have better outcomes than isolated interventions involving only the police or other individual government agency. To date, most of the Bank's investment in efforts to reduce crime have focused on crime prevention in the form of urban and social development programs. Investment and policy lending that support the improvement of police operations to reduce crime and develop stronger neighborhoods are more limited. To assist country teams and client counterparts in their efforts to develop effective, holistic responses against crime that include the police, justice reform staff in the Governance Global Practice teamed up with internationally recognized experts to compile evidence-based good practice information for developing effective police responses to crime. The resulting three part publication, titled Addressing the Enforcement Gap to Counter Crime: Investing in Public Safety, the Rule of Law and Local Development in Poor Neighborhoods outlines the impact of crime and violence on development and the poor in particular and explains a proven three-pronged approach to creating police agencies that work in collaboration with communities and other government and private service providers to identify crime problems, develop holistic and inclusive solutions the apply a restorative justice approach. The publication also outlines how such approach can be integrated into Bank projects and client country reform plans. 2016-06-06T15:54:34Z 2016-06-06T15:54:34Z 2016-03 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/04/26294403/addressing-enforcement-gap-counter-crime-investing-public-safety-rule-law-local-development-poor-neighborhoods-vol-2-part-2-options-world-bank-engagement-police http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24415 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper |