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  2. Feb 20, 2017 · New York City is wisely backing away from an abusive “zero tolerancepolicing strategy that led officers to blanket minority communities with criminal summonses for minor infractions — like...

  3. Zero-tolerance policies are applied uniformly and intended to help deter “bad behavior.” Break the rule and pay the consequences; there are no exceptions. Yet, there are instances in which a violation is not severe enough to merit suspension or expulsion.

    • Overview
    • Misconceptions About Zero Tolerance
    • Alternative Strategies

    Zero tolerance policingis sometimes known as "aggressive policing" or "aggressive order maintenance" and is sometimes incorrectly tied to "broken windows" policing. A zero tolerance strategy consists of stopping, questioning, and frisking pedestrians or drivers considered to be acting suspiciously and then arresting them for offenses whenever possi...

    It is understandable why there is widespread support for zero tolerance: Some marquee policing techniques that have been labeled part of “zero tolerance” (or, alternatively, as a form of “broken windows”) are not and actually fall under other policing strategies. One set of techniques often mislabeled as zero tolerance should actually be grouped wi...

    The following strategies are considered more effective than zero tolerance. The first three fall under the umbrella of problem-oriented policing, and the fourth falls under the umbrella of focused deterrence. 1. Alternative 1: Enforcement Against Fear-Generating Behavior: This would involve crackdowns on specified behaviors that generate fear, with...

  4. The police reforms introduced in New York City by William Bratton are now hailed by Mayor Rudy Giuliani as the epitome of “zero-tolerancepolicing, and he credits them for winning dramatic reductions in the city's crime rate.

    • Jeffrey A. Greene
    • 1999
  5. Jun 4, 2015 · As noted previously, this is the major finding of Braga et al.'s (2015) systematic review and meta-analysis of the effects of disorder policing on crime, with the chief implication that police departments should adopt a “community co-production” model rather than drift toward a zero-tolerance model. Policymakers, police leaders, and ...

    • Brandon C. Welsh, Anthony A. Braga, Anthony A. Braga, Gerben J. N. Bruinsma
    • 2015
  6. May 1, 2007 · Though it has been used in connection with a number of different policy initiatives, Zero Tolerance is most closely associated with policing and, in particular, with a set of policing strategies adopted by the New York Police Department in the 1990s.

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