Policing in Israel

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Arab Minority
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B01=Badi Hasisi
B01=David Weisburd
B01=Tal Jonathan-Zamir
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Category=JKSW1
Category=JPWL
Clearance Rates
comparative criminology
control
COP=United States
Counterterrorism
crime
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divided society police legitimacy
empirical policing methods
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Grant Number Z909601
IACP
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Israel
Israel's Arab Minority
Israeli Arabs
Israeli Police
Israel’s Arab Minority
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justice
Language_English
law enforcement research
legitimacy
minority policing studies
national
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performance
police
Police Community Relations
Police Community Relationships
Police Legitimacy
Police Minority Relations
Police Performance
Police science
Police Traffic Enforcement
Policing
Policing Terrorism
practice
Predicting Police Legitimacy
Price_€100 and above
procedural
Procedural Justice
PS=Active
public trust in law enforcement
social cohesion conflict
softlaunch
Start
Street Segments
studying
Terrorism Threats
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781498722568
  • Weight: 706g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Oct 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Policing in Israel presents important advances in Israeli police science during the past decade. It demonstrates how empirical research in countries outside the traditional research domains of the United States, Europe, and Australia can provide comparative legitimacy to key concepts and findings in policing. It also addresses innovative questions in the study of police, showing that there is much to learn about the police enterprise by looking to Israel.

The studies included in this book contribute to the policing literature in three significant ways. They replicate findings from English-speaking countries on key issues such as hot-spots policing, thereby supporting the validity of the findings and enabling a wider scope of generalization. Also, they utilize unique Israeli conditions to address questions that are difficult to test in other countries, such as in counterterrorism. Finally, they ask innovative questions in the study of policing that are yet to be addressed elsewhere.

Aside from providing better knowledge about policing in Israel, the broader advances in police science that the book illustrates play an important role. It contributes to major areas of contemporary interest in policing literature, including crime control, police–community relationships, and policing terrorism. Policing in Israel gives you not only a broad picture of Israeli policing and police research in the past decade, but also carries critical implications for policing scholars and practitioners around the world.

Tal Jonathan-Zamir is a lecturer at the Institute of Criminology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She earned her PhD at Hebrew University in 2010 and spent a year as a Fulbright postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Criminology, Law, and Society at George Mason University. Her research interests include police–community relationships, police discretion, police legitimacy, and policing terrorism.

David Weisburd is a Walter E. Meyer professor of law and criminal justice at the Hebrew University Faculty of Law in Jerusalem and distinguished professor of criminology, law, and society at George Mason University. His latest book, The Criminology of Place: Street Segments and Our Understanding of the Crime Problem, was published by Oxford University Press in 2012. He is the recipient of many international awards, including the 2010 Stockholm Prize in Criminology and the 2014 Sutherland Award from the American Society of Criminology.

Badi Hasisi serves as a chair of the Institute of Criminology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His main research focuses on policing divided societies; police–minority relations; law, history, and society; and terrorism and airport security.