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Executive Session on Policing
and Public Safety

Police agencies across the United States face a frightening array of new challenges, yet those agencies are equipped with organizational and strategic frameworks from an earlier era. What's more, they face these challenges at a time of high expectations established over a decade or more of declines in crime, and tight budgets at every level of government. The challenges themselves are many: some flow from the aftermath of September 2001, others involve new forms of crime made possible by the internet and other technologies, and still others are as intangible yet galvanizing as rising fear of crime and feelings of insecurity.

A generation ago, policing faced a similar set of challenges. The answers in that era were found through the Executive Session on Policing, jointly sponsored by the National Institute of Justice and the Kennedy School of Government starting in 1983. The participants in that Executive Session became the police leaders of choice for the next two decades.

The papers published during the course of the last Executive Session became essential reading in thousands of departments and executive offices across the country. The overarching strategy crystallized in that Executive Session--community policing--has become the dominant paradigm for policing across the nation and around the world.

Working again with NIJ, we have launched a similar Executive Session with equally high ambitions. The new Executive Session on Policing and Public Safety brings together today's established police executives with those rising to take their place. Joining these leaders in policing are local, state, and federal officials concerned with public safety as well as prominent academics. Together, the members of the Executive Session will elaborate the strategies and frameworks needed for policing in this new century.

Exceutive Sesasion on Policing and Public Safety, January 2008

Executive Session membership:

  • Chief Anthony Batts, Oakland Police Department
  • Professor David Bayley, Distinguished Professor, School of Criminal Justice, State University of New York at Albany
  • Dr. Anthony Braga, Senior Research Associate, Lecturer in Public Policy, Program in Criminal Justice Policy and Management, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
  • Chief William J. Bratton, Los Angeles Police Department
  • Chief Ella Bully-Cummings, Detroit Police Department (retired)
  • Ms. Christine Cole (Facilitator), Executive Director, Program in Criminal Justice Policy and Management, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
  • Commissioner Edward Davis, Boston Police Department
  • Chief Ronald Davis, East Palo Alto Police Department
  • Chief Edward Flynn, Milwaukee Police Department
  • Colonel Rick Fuentes, Superintendent, New Jersey State Police
  • Chief George Gascón, San Francisco Police Department
  • Mr. Gil Kerlikowske, Director, Office of National Drug Control Policy
  • Chief Cathy Lanier, Washington D.C. Metropolitan Police Department
  • Ms. Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, Visiting Scholar, New York University
  • Professor Tracey Meares, Walton Hale Hamilton Professor of Law, Yale Law School
  • Chief Constable Peter Neyroud, Chief Executive, National Policing Improvement Agency (UK)
  • Christine Nixon, Chair, Victorian Bushfire Reconstruction & Recovery Authority (Australia)
  • Chief Richard Pennington, Atlanta Police Department
  • Mayor Jerry Sanders, City of San Diego
  • Professor David Sklansky, Professor of Law, Faculty Co-Chair of the Berkeley Center for Criminal Justice, University of California, Berkeley, School of Law
  • Mr. Sean Smoot, Director & Chief Legal Counsel, Police Benevolent & Protective Association of Illinois
  • Professor Malcolm Sparrow, Professor of Practice of Public Management, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
  • Chief Darrel Stephens, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department (retired)
  • Professor Christopher Stone, Guggenheim Professor of the Practice of Criminal Justice, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
  • Mr. Jeremy Travis, President, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
  • Mr. Rick VanHouten, President, Fort Worth Police Association
  • Professor David Weisburd, Walter E. Meyer Professor of Law and Criminal Justice, Director, Institute of Criminology, Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University and Distinguished Professor, Department of Administration of Justice, George Mason University
  • Dr. Chuck Wexler, Executive Director, Police Executive Research Forum

New Perspectives in Policing:
Papers from the Executive Session on Policing and Public Safety

No. 1--Malcolm K. Sparrow. One Week in Heron City: A Case Study. September 2009. (Teaching note available upon request).

 


The Executive Session on Policing and Public Safety is funded by the National Institute of Justice in the Office of Justice Programs (OJP) at the US Department of Justice.

Attendance at the Executive Session on Policing and Public Safety is by invitation only.

 

 


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