Media Relations and Budgeting: Role of the Police Chief (original) (raw)

The Impact of Police and Media Relations on a Crisis

2006

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Police-Public Media Relations: Issues and Challenges

Research on Humanities and Social Sciences, 2014

Police-Public relations is the subject of Police-Media Relations. The Police and the media are two institutions that are aimed at ensuring that the society lives well based on lawful and orderly conduct in the interest of justice, fairness and development of the society. The two institutions require information from the public to perform their duties prudently and diligently. However, they differ in orientation, operational techniques, platforms and public perception. A typical scenario for instance, if there is an uprising, attack, disaster or any such unfortunate occurence, members of the public will be running to safer areas. It is common see the Police and the media are pushing their way forward into that 'danger zone' to perform their individual responsibilities. Both the Police and the media depend on sources for information to facilitate their work, though they differ significantly in approaching the subject matter; thus the Police interrogate to get information, the journalist on the otherhand, interviews to secure information. It is undeniable fact that, the two institutions require each other in the performance of their responsibilities and therefore need to develop a harmonious and cordial relations. One fact is that the Police have bags of information that the media require, likewise, the Police require the visibility and bridge that the media provide to link them with the society in a positive manner in order to have a goodwill from the public. Daily, the media reports on issues partaining crime or about the Police, the crime news and other sensational events excite the public and it enables them to appreciate the effort of the government or that of the Police on crime prevention and control. These inevitably indicates that the media and the police must work together. However, over the years there exists a mixed relation between them, this paper identifies those challenges affecting the duo relations and recommends ways to overcome those challenges.

Police and media relations

The remit of the Journal of criminal justice and security is to participate in contemporary criminal justice research relating to the examina tion and development of theory, structure, process, cause and consequence of societal responses to crime and criminality, and other security issues. While it incorporates the social and behavioural aspects of criminology, criminal justice is a much broader field of study because it is interdisciplinary in nature, covering the study of policing, prosecution, courts, prisons and other correctional and supervisory institutions, and security provision in contemporary society. The Journal of criminal justice and security research work applies basic scientific approaches to the following areas: • understanding the social, psychological, philosophic, economic, historical, legal and political aspects of crime, deviance and justice; • exploring the aetiology, prevention, control and response to criminality and criminals; • assessing the extent and form of crime and deviant behaviour in society; • studying criminal law and legal procedures; • studying law enforcement in practice and the work of prosecution services, the courts and correctional facilities; • studying other social control mechanisms and methods of security provision in contemporary society.

Effective police management of the media

Http Dx Doi Org 10 1080 1478601x 2011 592728, 2011

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Police corporate communications, crime reporting and the shaping of policing news

Police forces in England and Wales in recent years have attempted to improve the ways in which they communicate. This results from a number of converging pressures that include technological media developments and government and public pressures to provide reassuring policing services. The same media developments have had consequences for news organisations and their processes and practices of news gathering. In this context, the paper examines recent developments in police non-operational communications, explores the current dynamics of the relationship between crime reporters and their police sources and considers the implications for the 'shaping' of policing and crime news. Although the paper provides an examination of contemporary policeÁmedia relations, it also looks back to the work of Steve Chibnall whose 1970s research benchmarked policeÁmedia relations. Drawing on a national survey of police forces, together with data gathered from interviews with crime reporters and police communications managers, the paper concludes that although the policeÁmedia relationship is asymmetric in favour of the police, the practical dynamics of newsgathering ensure that policeÁmedia relations remain in a healthy tension; the shaping of policing news continues to be contested and negotiated. Introduction This paper explores the shaping of policing news by examining recent developments in police corporate communications and the relationship between crime reporters and their police sources. It draws on data from a study of policeÁmedia relations that included a survey of police forces in England, Wales and Scotland and interviews with police communications managers and crime reporters. While the paper examines contemporary policeÁmedia relations, it also looks back to the work of Steve Chibnall, who researched the relationship between crime reporters and the police in the 1970s. While Chibnall's work may seem remote from the present context, it provides a benchmark against which we can consider the subsequent development of police communications activities. The paper develops as follows: first, it sets out the background of converging policing pressures and changes in the media industry that make policeÁmedia relations a significant area of study. Second,

Police–Public Relations

Oxford Handbooks Online, 2016

Over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the meaning of “public-oriented policing” has changed, with great variations between countries. This essay critically analyzes the dichotomy that has often been established between police–public relations in Anglo-American contexts as the model of public-oriented “democratic policing” and police–public relations in continental Europe. Using examples from Britain, the United States, France, and Germany, this essay argues that interpretations by historians and police scholars of the nature of police–public relations have been fundamentally influenced by the political regime they served, and that the positive appreciation among scholars for the principles behind the Anglo-American ideal of police–public relations has often been accepted uncritically. Examples from France and Germany open wider questions about the impact of democratization on police–public relations, the effects of locally organized police on even-handed and responsive polici...