Chapter 1: Introduction. Important notes These slides are not a replacement for the text Please use these slides as a starting point for your own PowerPoint.
Chapter 4: Defining Intelligence-Led Policing. Important notes These slides are not a replacement for the text Please use these slides as a starting point.
Chapter 10: Challenges for the future. Important notes These slides are not a replacement for the text Please use these slides as a starting point for.
Chapter 2: Origins of Intelligence-Led Policing. Important notes These slides are not a replacement for the text Please use these slides as a starting.
Reasonable Officer Response (R.O.R.) Canadian Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement (CACOLE) Deputy Chief Norm Lipinski Professionalism.
The 7th SIPR Annual Lecture The Power of Policing Partnerships Professor Lorraine Mazerolle University of Queensland.
The thin green line? The challenges of policing wildlife crime in Scotland Nicholas R. Fyfe Alison D. Reeves University of Dundee & Scottish Institute.
CJ © 2011 Cengage Learning Chapter 3 Defining and Measuring Crime.
Cross-jurisdictional Policing Perspectives Jon White, ANZPAA CEO 13 November 2012.
Blame, Disadvantage and Prejudicial Resource Allocation Professor Mike Hough Birkbeck, University of London Windsor, 25 April 2014.
S/Sgt Ken Anderson Police Learning Centre Durham Regional Police William D. Muirhead PhD. University of Ontario Institute of Technology.
Youth and Policing. Bail Me Out – Young People and Bail in NSW Presented by Katrina Wong, Marrickville Legal Centre at the NSWCLC State Conference 2010.