Compare And Contrast The Eras Of Policing

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Both of these articles were focused on the Strategy of Policing, but the author’s approaches to the ‘hot topics,’ couldn’t be more difficult. Williams and Murphy focused on the different eras of policing, and how the racial conflicts have overlapped policing efforts. Whereas, Kelling and Moore focused on how police have evolved with the eras. The articles were dramatically different, however, the policing eras: Political, Reform, and Community Orientated eras were influenced largely as the main focuses for each academic article. When it comes to the political era, all policing resources had all been derived from the same source, the politicians that were in office at the time. During this era, all police had to function on foot patrol in …show more content…

This era is where the shift from a centralized task force has gravitated to a decentralized task force, causing some friction from both the community and the officers that serve it. Police are told that they are needed to listen to the concerns for the community; however, law enforcement is still the primary goal. Police forces now have to defend the values for which the forces were built upon. The idea of problem solving has come into question with police discretion towards certain run-ins with the law. Williams and Murphy argue it is due to the lack of sensitivity from minorities and the concern on crime itself than the community. Kelling and Moore contradict Williams and Murphy, with Kelling/Moore suggesting the era is more about listening to concerns of the community and improving the citizen satisfaction. But both the article came to the conclusion of the silent underlying problems that are becoming more of a “quiet riot” with the police and the …show more content…

Of course, both articles had targeted different goals, but the Williams/Murphy was very BIASED! The article said nothing about how minorities dealt with police, only what happened to the minorities historically and the sympathy card was amplified throughout the article. Compared to Kelling and Moore, this article made it more robotic, in terms of how the police function but not respond. Williams and Murphy were missing more of a direct connection with the minority aspect and Kelling and Moore were missing the impact that these eras had given society. When looking at today’s society, the community oriented policing era was the era that has the most relevance, and yet both articles failed to not only emphasize societal impacts, but to also expand on today’s immense confliction with policing and the

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