Abstract
There has been little systematic effort to examine the prevalence and factors that influence police utilization of research and police practitioner-researcher partnerships in Australia as found in Chapter 2 in the United States. However, there has been a slow growth of partnerships between police and researchers in Australia, which has provided individuals with invaluable insight and experience into these relationships. This chapter provides this insight and experience from a senior police executive in Queensland Police Service.
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- 1.
The development of this monograph is a further example of the positive benefits of such a relationship. The cultural factors that exist within both domains (police and academia) would most probably have been less conducive to such development in earlier times.
- 2.
The closest procedure in the USA is a Sobriety Checkpoint.
- 3.
Sherman (1998).
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Rojek, J., Martin, P., Alpert, G.P. (2015). The Perspective of a Frontline Practitioner in Australia. In: Developing and Maintaining Police-Researcher Partnerships to Facilitate Research Use. SpringerBriefs in Criminology(). Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2056-3_3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2056-3_3
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