Faced with the crime associated with grinding poverty and a no-win drug war, police departments are adapting and changing. Foot patrol officers again walk the streets and talk to citizens, and neighborhood crime watches are valued as the eyes and ears ofenforcers. Most seminal is the "quiet revolution" which has been called problem-oriented policing. This revolution makes police officers pioneering professionals who systematically study and address social problems in their localities. Cops become socialscientists who work with other agents in the community to address root causes of crime.
Police as Problem Solvers is a lively yet scholarly book written by a pioneer of the approach. The author conducted the legendary first experiment in which police officers became researchers and ’agents of change.’ Of special interest to psychologists will be verbatim material in the book about an innovative program designed to reduce police use of force. The authors describe the origin of this peer g