10 research outputs found
Aboriginal Policing in Rural Canada: Establishing a Research Agenda
Canada’s First Nations Policing Program (FNPP) provides the funding and programmatic
structure for policing 535 rural Aboriginal communities. After two decades and almost three
billion (CA) dollars in expenditures, however, there has been comparatively little scholarly
assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of this approach to policing. This study highlights
the current state of the FNPP and we find that most government funded research has focused
upon the administrative goals of the FNPP while relatively little government or scholarly
attention has been paid to program outcomes. We identified three broad needs for Aboriginal
policing research in Canada, including; (a) developing a research based inventory of best
practices in rural and Aboriginal policing; (b) examining the efficacy of plural policing; and (c)
how the study of Aboriginal policing can inform organizational theory. Each of these issues has
implications for the development of research, practice, policy, and theory, and ultimately,
ensuring just and fair outcomes concerning public safety for Canada’s Aboriginal peoples