The Israel Police needs a more effective strategy for
developing and maintaining public support, according to a recent report by
U.S.-based nonprofit research organization the RAND Corporation.
After monitoring the performance of the police from 2010
through 2012, the researchers concluded that the public's trust in the police
declined during that period, and that "the public holds many negative
views of the police."
These conclusions stand in contrast to claims by the police
in recent months, according to which public trust in the police is on the rise.
The report was submitted to Public Security Minister Yitzhak
Aharonovitch and Police Commissioner Yohanan Danino. It was commissioned by
Aharonovitch and Danino's predecessor, David Cohen.
In his first speech in his new post, in May 2011, Danino
recalled that Israel's first Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion, said that the
public's attitude to the law is demonstrated, above all, by the public's
attitude to police officers.
Danino even began implementing a program, called Turning
Point, aimed at increasing public trust in the police. Its goals included
renovating police stations and responding to all emergency calls from citizens
with a text message indicating that their issue was being addressed. However,
RAND found that the problem wasn't with rundown police stations but a lack of
transparency and accountability.
As an experiment, researchers affixed cameras to the
uniforms of six officers, each from the Petah Tikva and Ayalon stations, with
the instruction that the officers could turn the cameras on or off at their own
discretion. In 65 percent of the cases recorded, the research team member who
evaluated the interactions judged that the officer treated the citizens with
respect. In only about 25 percent of the cases did the evaluators judge that
the interaction between the officer and citizen was negative.
The research team conducted interviews with 26 focus groups,
composed of Israelis representing a range of ages, racial and ethnic groups,
and a number of geographical areas, in Hebrew, Arabic and Russian.
The issues of public mistrust in, and dissatisfaction with,
the police soon came to the fore. When asked what the police should do,
participants said they expected the police to serve the community, maintain
public order, decrease crime, be trustworthy, treat people fairly, and respond
to calls. Most focus group members said that, in their opinion, the police did
not meet any of these requirements satisfactorily.
When asked to articulate the reasons for this belief,
participants cited officers' unprofessionalism, rudeness and lack of
authoritative appearance, as well as a tendency to arrive late when responding
to incidents. In addition, they felt that the police focus on major crimes and
the activities of organized crime gangs rather than on the everyday crime that
is most distressing to them.
Arab and immigrant respondents in particular complained of
discriminatory treatment from officers. "We are a second-class people, and
we are aware of the fact that we do not receive first-class services," one
Arab focus group member said.
The researchers also determined that Israelis recognize many
positive elements in the performance of the police. Many sources consulted for
the study noted that the police are effective at fighting many types of crime,
and said the police should have bigger budgets and be given the resources to
hire more officers.
The report notes that Israel Police, in contrast to many
police forces around the world, is responsible not only for all domestic
policing duties - including traffic and highway patrols - but also for duties
that are usually carried out by separate crime-fighting agencies, such as drug,
alcohol and firearms, border policing, and the investigation of economic
crimes.
The report also includes a media review and extensively
cites references, including a recent study by Dr. Eran Vigoda-Gadot of the
University of Haifa's Center for Administration and Public Policy, and Dr.
Shlomo Mizrahi of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev's School of Business and
Management, showing that public satisfaction with the Israel Police is below
that of nearly all other public services and agencies.
No comments:
Post a Comment