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CALUYA,ZEA MAIZE KAYE T

BSCRIM 2C
A. Important Basic Principles of Community Policing
1. Community Partnerships:

- Building a partnership to those organization that will improve the


policing
- Just like the DOLE it contributes formulating policies and
implementing programs in the field of labor and employment.
- People must build and try to connect with some organizations in order
for them to find answers to problems and build trust in the police;

2. Organizational Transformation:
- for those that are starting a new field.
- People who are changing their valuable uses to match new
economics and also to support community and partnerships and
proactive problem solving.
- People who develop new things in order to support the community.

3. Problem solving:
- must forge a relationships between the community and to the police
is a crucial aspect in establishing credibility and trust such that the
facts meant for the other party may be accepted and believed upon.
- Developing ways to reduce the quantity and scope of problems in the
long run
- Problem identification and prioritization

B. Activities in Community Policing


1. Patrol Activities
- Traffic Direction and Control, to avoid conflict on the road and to keep
people from moving.
- “Standing and watch” duties- Essential policy facilities and institutions,
such as transmission towers, bridges, and banks, are protected.
- Fixed and Mobile checkpoints- to prohibit the spread and movement of
criminal instruments, as well as the mobility of people with criminal
records and intentions
2. Organizational works
- Barangay Peacekeeping Action Teams (BPATS)
- Anti-Drug Councils and Movements
- Livelihood Cooperatives

3. Community Interaction 
- Area Visit – The Community or Area visit is carried out for a variety of
reasons and is aimed to accomplish the following goals with an 8-
man team.
- people who have endured nonprofit collaborations
- People who volunteer for donations.

C. Important Basic Principles of Community Policing


1. The police's primary objective is to prevent crime and maintain a
peaceful and orderly community without resorting to military
involvement to suppress crime or impose harsh legal penalties. As a
result, enforcing laws and regulations that protect lives and property,
as well as maintaining peace and order, are prerequisites for limiting
environmental conflict and so ensuring public order and safety.
2. The police's capacity to accomplish their duties is contingent on
public acceptance of their existence, actions, and behavior, as well as
their ability to secure and sustain public respect.
3. To gain and preserve the public's respect and acceptance, the police
must obtain the public's willing assistance in voluntary observance of
the law.
4. A single cop with the capacity to forcefully but politely solicit the
assistance of individuals or groups may routinely accomplish what it
would take dozens of officers to do using a "hard" approach to the
problem. A parallel structure of resistance develops inside the
individual or group in locations where strong physical force has been
used to achieve police objectives.
5. by readying exceptional person and friendship to all members of
society, regardless of race or socioeconomic status; by readying
courtesy and friendly good humor; and by readying individual
sacrifice in the protection and preservation of life.
6. When persuasion, advice, and warning are found to be insufficient to
achieve police objectives, police should just use violent restraint to
the extent required to secure observance of the law or restore order;
and officers should use only the minimum degree of physical force
necessary on any given occasion to achieve a police objective.
7. The police should always maintain a relationship with the general
public that reflects the traditional heritage that the police are the
general public and the general public are the police.
8. The police should always keep their activities focused on their
functions and should never appear to usurp the Judiciary's powers by
avenging people, the state, or any authority judging guilt or punishing
the guilty.
9. The lack of crime and disturbance, rather than obvious evidence of
police action in dealing with them, is the litmus test of police
efficiency.

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