Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Part I Crime, Insecurity, and Policing
- Part II The Effects of Community Policing
- 6 Meta-analysis of the Effects of Community Policing
- 7 Can Trust Be Built through Citizen Monitoring of Police Activity? Evidence from Santa Catarina, Brazil
- 8 Do Police–Community MeetingsWork? Experimental Evidence from Medellín, Colombia
- 9 Community Policing, Vigilantism, and the Rule of Law: Evidence from Liberia
- 10 Community Policing and Citizen Trust in Pakistan
- 11 Community Policing in the Philippines: Communication, Trust, and Service Provision
- 12 Restoring Police-Community Relations in Uganda
- Part III Reflecting on Community Policing
- References
- Index
- Series page
11 - Community Policing in the Philippines: Communication, Trust, and Service Provision
from Part II - The Effects of Community Policing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 December 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Part I Crime, Insecurity, and Policing
- Part II The Effects of Community Policing
- 6 Meta-analysis of the Effects of Community Policing
- 7 Can Trust Be Built through Citizen Monitoring of Police Activity? Evidence from Santa Catarina, Brazil
- 8 Do Police–Community MeetingsWork? Experimental Evidence from Medellín, Colombia
- 9 Community Policing, Vigilantism, and the Rule of Law: Evidence from Liberia
- 10 Community Policing and Citizen Trust in Pakistan
- 11 Community Policing in the Philippines: Communication, Trust, and Service Provision
- 12 Restoring Police-Community Relations in Uganda
- Part III Reflecting on Community Policing
- References
- Index
- Series page
Summary
In this chapter, we test the effects of community policing in the Sorsogon Province of the Philippines. The intervention generated a four-fold increase in police-citizen interactions in treated villages, but consistent with meta-analysis of all six sites in this volume, we found no effects of the intervention on crime rates or citizens’ attitudes about public safety. To disaggregate the effects of different aspects of community policing, we sequenced the implementation of community engagement (CEP) and problem-oriented policing (POP) but found no effects on the harmonized outcomes of either CEP on its own or the combination of CEP and POP. Finally, we present suggestive evidence of positive impacts on the specific types of crimes that barangays’ problem-oriented policing teams elected to focus on, indicating that while community policing cannot address all of a community’s problems en masse, it may improve specifically targeted issues.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Crime, Insecurity, and Community PolicingExperiments on Building Trust, pp. 400 - 438Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024