Pushing on a String? An Argument for Civil Society-driven Community Policing as Alternative to Ministry-centric Approach in Conflict-affected States

Most international support for community policing focuses primarily if not exclusively on capacity building of the government, namely Ministries of Interior and police forces. For structural reasons, these organizations—in and of themselves—are often not the most appropriate partners to launch or su...

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Main Authors: A. Heather Coyne, Ingrid Nyborg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Librelloph 2020-05-01
Series:Journal of Human Security
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.librelloph.com/journalofhumansecurity/article/view/453
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spelling doaj-6244cadcae12426a85357e4183454edf2021-06-24T05:58:15ZengLibrellophJournal of Human Security1835-38002020-05-01162314310.12924/johs2020.16020031174Pushing on a String? An Argument for Civil Society-driven Community Policing as Alternative to Ministry-centric Approach in Conflict-affected StatesA. Heather Coyne0Ingrid Nyborg1Office of the Special Envoy of the Secretary General for Yemen, United Nations, Amman, JordanNorwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU), Ås, NorwayMost international support for community policing focuses primarily if not exclusively on capacity building of the government, namely Ministries of Interior and police forces. For structural reasons, these organizations—in and of themselves—are often not the most appropriate partners to launch or sustain community-oriented policing initiatives, especially in the early phases of police reform. This paper presents an alternative to the ministry-centric approach in the form of civil society-driven programming for police reform. Using the case of police reform in Afghanistan in the late 2000s, we argue that a focus on community engagement, accountability, and responsiveness to the needs of the population can lead to improved human security even in post-conflict countries. Although a grassroots approach may seem daunting international actors more familiar with strategic advising at the ministerial level, we find that it provides an opportunity for more sustainable and effective engagement than ministry-centric efforts alone. Our experience from the Afghanistan case also shows, however, that a civil society approach is not a standalone—it needs to be complemented by ministerial initiatives as government has the central role in directing police reform. Adding a civil society component can make the official efforts more likely to succeed.http://www.librelloph.com/journalofhumansecurity/article/view/453afghanistancommunity-based policingcivil societyhuman securityinternational police advisingpolice reform
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Heather Coyne
Ingrid Nyborg
spellingShingle A. Heather Coyne
Ingrid Nyborg
Pushing on a String? An Argument for Civil Society-driven Community Policing as Alternative to Ministry-centric Approach in Conflict-affected States
Journal of Human Security
afghanistan
community-based policing
civil society
human security
international police advising
police reform
author_facet A. Heather Coyne
Ingrid Nyborg
author_sort A. Heather Coyne
title Pushing on a String? An Argument for Civil Society-driven Community Policing as Alternative to Ministry-centric Approach in Conflict-affected States
title_short Pushing on a String? An Argument for Civil Society-driven Community Policing as Alternative to Ministry-centric Approach in Conflict-affected States
title_full Pushing on a String? An Argument for Civil Society-driven Community Policing as Alternative to Ministry-centric Approach in Conflict-affected States
title_fullStr Pushing on a String? An Argument for Civil Society-driven Community Policing as Alternative to Ministry-centric Approach in Conflict-affected States
title_full_unstemmed Pushing on a String? An Argument for Civil Society-driven Community Policing as Alternative to Ministry-centric Approach in Conflict-affected States
title_sort pushing on a string? an argument for civil society-driven community policing as alternative to ministry-centric approach in conflict-affected states
publisher Librelloph
series Journal of Human Security
issn 1835-3800
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Most international support for community policing focuses primarily if not exclusively on capacity building of the government, namely Ministries of Interior and police forces. For structural reasons, these organizations—in and of themselves—are often not the most appropriate partners to launch or sustain community-oriented policing initiatives, especially in the early phases of police reform. This paper presents an alternative to the ministry-centric approach in the form of civil society-driven programming for police reform. Using the case of police reform in Afghanistan in the late 2000s, we argue that a focus on community engagement, accountability, and responsiveness to the needs of the population can lead to improved human security even in post-conflict countries. Although a grassroots approach may seem daunting international actors more familiar with strategic advising at the ministerial level, we find that it provides an opportunity for more sustainable and effective engagement than ministry-centric efforts alone. Our experience from the Afghanistan case also shows, however, that a civil society approach is not a standalone—it needs to be complemented by ministerial initiatives as government has the central role in directing police reform. Adding a civil society component can make the official efforts more likely to succeed.
topic afghanistan
community-based policing
civil society
human security
international police advising
police reform
url http://www.librelloph.com/journalofhumansecurity/article/view/453
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