1st Edition

Challenges of Contemporary Policing Higher Education, Technology, and Officers’ Well-Being

Edited By Vicente Riccio, Di Jia, Dilip K. Das Copyright 2025
    208 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    208 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This edited collection reflects contemporary challenges faced by police forces across the globe and the role of technology in addressing them. The use of science and technology raises questions about ethics, training, the well-being of people, and freedom. New technologies promise to foster police practices based on intelligence, accuracy, and preparedness, and are considered necessary to overcome challenges such as declining budgets, lack of personnel, and legitimacy. However, technologies can also be used for authoritarian and nefarious purposes. For those reasons, this book aims to discuss related topics from various contexts to establish connections among common problems in the field of policing across the globe.

    This book provides an internationally relevant assessment of the use of technology in the field of policing, as well as the impact on training and police well-being. It is ideal for  an academic audience at both graduate and undergraduate levels in the fields of criminal justice studies, police studies, environmental criminology, legal sociology, and public policy, and will be of interest to police practitioners, legal professionals, social service workers, and public-sector managers.

    Introduction

    Vicente Riccio, Di Jia & Dilip K. Das

    1. Performance evaluation of integrated public security areas: Application of the PROMETHEE II method in the Brazilian context

    Marcio Pereira Basilio, Valdecy Pereira, Max William Coelho Moreira de Oliveira & Antonio Fernandes da Costa Neto

    2. Addressing the Challenges of Law Enforcement Higher Education in Hungary

    László Christián

    3. The Formation of the Local Prevention Police Units at the National University of Lanús 

    Daniel Russo & Alejandro Hener

    4. Exploring an incorporated model of community justice in Chinese immigrant community: The perspective of law enforcement

    Jurg Gerber, Di Jia & Charles W. Russo

    5. Understanding Officer’s Behavior in a Non-Traffic Situation: Why will police officers use force and verbally attack citizens during a street stop?

    Francis D. Boateng & Michael K. Dzordzormenyoh

    6. The determinant factors of religious radicalization: The case of Kyrgyzstan

    Erlan Bakiev & Zairbek Kozhomberdiev

    7. Cameras, community, and police: possible correlations in the evaluation of the body-worn cameras for the Brazilian Federal Highway Police

    Otávio Lacerda, Eduardo Magrone, Vicente Riccio and Wagner Silveira Rezende

    8. Officer Suicide: Agency Protocol and Prevention Strategies

    Charles W. Russo, Jarrod Sadulski & Matthew Loux

    9. Police suicide in Brazil: What do we know about?

    Dayse Assunção Miranda & Fernanda Cruz

    10. PTSD: Is it Pension Worthy

    Charles Russo & Stephanie Myers-Hunziker

    11. Addictive Hypervigilance and Uncontrolled Police Use of Force

     Jesse Cheng

    12. The Law Enforcement Workforce Crisis: Developing Targeted Recruitment and Retention Strategies for Future Generations

     Nicole Cain

    Biography

    Vicente Riccio holds a doctorate on Sociology from Instituto Universitário de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro and was the coordinator of the graduate program of Law and Innovation at Federal University of Juiz de For a (2017 – 2023), Brazil. He also has worked as a consultant for many public institutions in Brazil, such as the Ministry of Justice, Public Security Secretary of Rio de Janeiro, Civil Police of Amazonas. His research interests are police reform, legal systems in developing democracies, media, justice and video evidence. He has organized “Police and Society in Brazil” (Routledge) book coedited with Wesley Skogan (Northwestern University. He has also published articles and book chapters in international and Brazilian publications.

    Di Jia an Associate Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at MSU Denver. After getting her Ph.D. from the College of Criminal Justice at Sam Houston State University, Dr. Jia is committed to teaching in criminal justice. As a former Law enforcement officer in emergency and crisis policing, she applies her research and working experience to the classroom. Her teaching/research interests include Police Systems and Practices, Crime Analysis, Homeland Security and Crisis Management, and International and Comparative Studies on Criminal Justice Issues

    Dilip K. Das is the Founding President of the International Police Executive Symposium, IPES, (www.ipes.info), and the Founding and former Editor-in-Chief of Police Practice and Research: An International Journal, PPR, (http://www.tandfonline.com/gppr). He is the current editor of Advances in Police Theory and Practice, and Interviews with Global Leaders in Policing, Courts and Prisons. Dr. Das has also worked as Human Rights Consultant for the United Nations and is professor of Criminal Justice. He is nowadays teaching at the Coppin State University in Baltimore. He has also authored and coauthored diverse books in the field of Criminal Justice