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TOCH LIBRARY

Most of the books in Hans Toch’s library are heavily marked up. This makes them worthless monetarily, but a treasure to see what he considered significant in the many classics in his library, including many written by his former students.

Posts tagged policing practices
THE MEANING OF COMMUNITY IN COMMUNITY POLICING

MAY CONTAIN MARKUP

Robert C. Trojanowiez and Mark H. Moore

The Meaning of Community in Community Policing delves into the complex relationship between law enforcement and the communities they serve. Authored by a seasoned law enforcement professional with years of experience in community policing, this book offers a thought-provoking analysis of the importance of building trust, fostering communication, and creating meaningful partnerships between police departments and the diverse communities they protect.

Through insightful case studies and real-life examples, the author explores how community policing strategies can lead to more effective crime prevention, increased public safety, and enhanced community relations. By highlighting the role of empathy, collaboration, and cultural competency in law enforcement practices, this book serves as a valuable resource for law enforcement agencies, policymakers, and community leaders seeking to strengthen the bond between police and the communities they serve. The Meaning of Community in Community Policing is an essential read for anyone interested in understanding the vital role of community engagement in shaping modern law enforcement practices.

Michigan. National Neighborhood Foot Patrol Center. 1988. 23p.

The Honest Politician's Guide Crime Control

By Norval Morris and Gordon Hawkins

FROM THE JACKET: "We have a cure for crime," Morris and Hawkins boldly state. *We offer not a lightning panacea but rather a legislative and administrative regimen which would substantially reduce crime and the fear of crime." Crime seriously impairs the quality of life in this country. We hesitate to walk at night in our cities. Our level of criminal violence shocks the world. "To the student of comparative criminal statistics the United States may or may not be the land of the free, but it is most certainly the home of the brave." "There is now available to us," the authors argue, "a fund of information on the subject which, were it acted upon responsibly and steadily, would reduce crime and curtail the fear, suffering, and unhappiness it entails. It is not lack of knowledge, but rather a failure of political responsibility, that supports our present luxuriant crime rates." Hence the program this book offers is directed to the politicians and to the concerned citizens who are responsible for them….

Chicago. University of Chicago Press. 1970.

Organizing Against Crime: Redeveloping the Neighborhood

USED BOOK. MAY CONTAIN MARK-UP

By Anthony Sorrentino

FROM THE INTRODUCTION: Chicago, home of some of the world's biggest criminals, has also been wheresome ofthe world's best criminologists have worked. But while the former, from Al Capone to the Blackstone Rangers, have been highly visible to the public, the criminologist's audience has been much smaller, more academic than public; this in spite of the enormous interest Americans have in crime and our belief, though often skeptical, that knowledge--or science, at any rate--is power, and necessary to an educated public in a democracy.

NY. Human Sciences Press. 1977. 261p. USED BOOK-CONTAINS MARK-UP