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Engaging Police in Immigrant Communities: Promising Practices from the Field

NCJ Number
240198
Author(s)
Pradine Saint-Fort; Noëlle Yasso; Susan Shah
Date Published
November 2012
Length
76 pages
Annotation
These multimedia resources - a report, toolkit, and podcasts - feature the efforts of 10 law enforcement agencies to engage immigrant communities and provide a practical, field-informed guide for community policing professionals seeking to begin or build upon their work with immigrant communities and immigrant community leaders looking to collaborate effectively with law enforcement.
Abstract
Today, approximately 40 million foreign-born people live in the United States, seven million of whom arrived within the past eight years. Because very little is known about how most police agencies nationwide work with immigrant communities, in 2010, Vera's Center on Immigration and Justice partnered with the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of Community Oriented Policing Services to identify and disseminate information on law enforcement practices that cultivate trust and collaboration with immigrant communities and merit replication. Staff from Vera's Center on Immigration and Justice solicited information from more than 1,000 agencies in jurisdictions with large immigrant populations and evaluated nearly 200 agencies' practices. The resulting multimedia resources - report, toolkit, podcasts - features the efforts of 10 law enforcement agencies of different sizes, capacities, and circumstances. Engaging Police in Immigrant Communities is a practical, field-informed guide for community policing professionals seeking to begin or build upon their work with immigrant communities and immigrant community leaders looking to collaborate effectively with law enforcement.