Crime Prevention Partnerships: Lessons from Practice
Author: E Pelser
Date: 2002
Size:
145 pages
Access full text: available online
Predicting criminal activity is difficult, and dependent on contested theories. However, a collaborative, multi-disciplinary, multi-agency approach has been shown to work best. This Institute of Security Studies book looks at some approaches taken towards the implementation of crime prevention in South Africa, and draws lessons from them. It was written for practitioners, particularly those in government and non-governmental organisations.
The dynamics of managing different political agendas and perspectives, competition between agencies, power relations and authority within and between agencies, access to decision making processes, different working procedures and accountability are often ignored when looking at crime prevention. In South Africa, the implementation of crime prevention policy has had an inauspicious start, and has been marred by some of these problems. The White Paper on Safety and Security has not been implemented in a systematic way. The National Crime Prevention Strategy (NCPS) has been compromised by the differing political needs of new politicians as well as bureaucratic competition in the Department of Safety and Security. The NCPS focused on criminal justice and policing projects as opposed to prevention projects and few of its initiatives were implemented at the local level.
There is a wide gap between policy and practice in crime prevention in South Africa, and this can be attributed to the general failure of policy to take into account the requirements of implementation. Key findings are that:
The adoption of policy models from the developed West do not work as they are based on systems that are strong in the West but weak in South Africa. An assessment of feasibility could have been undertaken first. Key recommendations are that:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Pelser, E., 2002, 'Crime Prevention Partnerships: Lessons from Practice', Institute for Security Studies
Author:
Institute for Security Studies (ISS), Pretoria, http://www.iss.co.za