‘Without uniform I am a community member, uncle, brother, granddad’: Community policing in Australia’s Torres Strait Region

IF 1.5 3区 社会学 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Zoe Staines, John G Scott, J. Morton
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

As a palpable legacy of violent colonialism, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (‘Indigenous’) Australians are the most incarcerated peoples in the world. Community policing, which hinges on the development of trusting community–police partnerships, is frequently proposed as a means of reducing this over-representation, but approaches vary and produce divergent outcomes. This article draws on interview data to explore policing in Australia’s Torres Strait Region – a remote archipelago situated off the northern tip of Queensland. A strong commitment to community and hybridised policing approaches likely provide a partial explanation for relatively low crime in the region. However, under-reporting of some offences (e.g. domestic violence) suggests a possible need to overlay alternative approaches that improve access to justice for all victims, especially women. Overall, the Torres Strait Region experience holds possible lessons for policing in Australia’s other remote Indigenous communities, again demonstrating that decolonisation is a critical starting point for addressing over-representation.
“没有制服,我是社区成员、叔叔、兄弟、爷爷”:澳大利亚托雷斯海峡地区的社区警务
作为暴力殖民主义的明显遗产,澳大利亚土著和托雷斯海峡岛民(“土著”)是世界上被监禁最多的民族。社区警务依赖于相互信任的社区警察伙伴关系的发展,经常被提议作为减少这种过度代表性的一种手段,但方法各不相同,产生不同的结果。本文利用采访数据来探索澳大利亚托雷斯海峡地区(位于昆士兰州北端的一个偏远群岛)的警务工作。对社区和混合警务方法的坚定承诺可能是该地区犯罪率相对较低的部分原因。然而,一些罪行(如家庭暴力)的报告不足表明,可能需要采用其他办法,改善所有受害者,特别是妇女获得司法救助的机会。总的来说,托雷斯海峡地区的经验为澳大利亚其他偏远土著社区的警务工作提供了可能的教训,再次表明非殖民化是解决代表性过度问题的关键起点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Criminology
Journal of Criminology CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
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