Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder (CARE CDD) consists of two separate eLearning courses, one designed for law enforcement practitioners and one geared specifically for executives, that examine successful initiatives around the country. These initiatives include homeless outreach teams, mental health crisis intervention, domestic abuse harm reduction, substance use disorder treatment, gang violence prevention, and more—demonstrating a “community care” framework for responding effectively to a variety of disorder and crime problems. The courses examine the role of law enforcement officers and agencies in developing, implementing, sustaining, and evaluating these types of community-based problem-solving strategies.
Public safety agencies recognize that many types of harm can affect the health of a community—not just the major crime incidents that dominate headlines, but also the everyday disorder problems that negatively impact community members and generate frequent calls for service. In many cases, past efforts to manage disorder have focused on enforcement actions targeting low-level offenses. However, research and practice indicate that aggressive, enforcement-focused order maintenance strategies are ineffective and can undermine relationships between law enforcement and community members.
Increasingly, public safety professionals recognize the need for innovative problem solving to address disorder and crime problems, which occur disproportionately in under-resourced neighborhoods and are often rooted in economic and social inequities. Responding to complex problems requires law enforcement to form partnerships with community stakeholders and other agencies to enact multi-faceted initiatives. Such efforts represent a fundamental change in the way we think about public safety, emphasizing the collaborative role of police and other law enforcement practitioners as caretakers of their communities.
To help connect principles to practice, a series of field-driven video case briefings provides insight on innovative practices that law enforcement practitioners and executives can apply in their own communities. The case studies feature interviews with subject matters experts currently engaged in community-oriented programs to manage disorder problems in their jurisdictions.
Learning Objectives:
- Explain how the principles and practices of community policing can be applied to address community-defined disorder
- Describe the role of law enforcement in managing community-defined disorder
- Differentiate between varying approaches to order maintenance
- Explain the relationship between disorder policing and community policing
- Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community
- Apply problem-solving methods to identify, define, and respond to community-defined disorder problems
- Describe the benefits of proactive, collaborative problem solving
- Explain how to identify and define disorder problems that require intervention
- Identify partners who can share resources to address specific disorder problems in the community
- Develop effective responses to community-defined disorder
- Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community
- Identify collaboration and communication strategies to support effective problem solving
- Based on the needs of the agency, select appropriate leadership strategies to support effective order maintenance strategies
- List benefits of using a collaborative model to improve quality of life in the community
- Identify methods for communicating effectively with community members about quality-of-life initiatives
- Identify structures to promote collaboration among organization members
- Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community
- Describe how problem-solving initiatives to address disorder can be sustained for long-term success
- Identify factors that may influence the sustainability of problem-solving initiatives
- Explain the role of discretion when managing disorder in the community
- Develop a plan for the training and ongoing professional development of personnel involved in problem-solving initiatives
- Select appropriate performance measures for evaluating the success of first-line personnel
- Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community
Self-Paced Online Course
4 learning hours
Classroom – Virtual Course
8-16 learning hours
Cooperative Partners:
This tuition-free online training was originally supported by cooperative agreement 2018-CK-WXK-018 by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).