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Broken Windows (page 4)
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In response to fear people avoid one another, weakening controls.
Sometimes they call the police. Patrol cars arrive, an occasional arrest
occurs but crime continues and disorder is not abated. Citizens complain
to the police chief, but he explains that his department is low on
personnel and that the courts do not punish petty or first-time offenders.
To the residents, the police who arrive in squad cars are either
ineffective or uncaring: to the police, the residents are animals who
deserve each other. The citizens may soon stop calling the police, because
"they can't do anything."
The process we call urban decay has occurred for centuries in every city.
But what is happening today is different in at least two important
respects. First, in the period before, say, World War II, city dwellers-
because of money costs, transportation difficulties, familial and church
connections--could rarely move away from neighborhood problems. When
movement did occur, it tended to be along public-transit routes. Now
mobility has become exceptionally easy for all but the poorest or those
who are blocked by racial prejudice. Earlier crime waves had a kind of
built-in self-correcting mechanism: the determination of a neighborhood or
community to reassert control over its turf. Areas in Chicago, New York,
and Boston would experience crime and gang wars, and then normalcy would
return, as the families for whom no alternative residences were possible
reclaimed their authority over the streets.
Second, the police in this earlier period assisted in that reassertion of
authority by acting, sometimes violently, on behalf of the community.
Young toughs were roughed up, people were arrested "on suspicion" or for
vagrancy, and prostitutes and petty thieves were routed. "Rights" were
something enjoyed by decent folk, and perhaps also by the serious
professional criminal, who avoided violence and could afford a lawyer.
This pattern of policing was not an aberration or the result of occasional
excess. From the earliest days of the nation, the police function was seen
primarily as that of a night watchman: to maintain order against the chief
threats to order--fire, wild animals, and disreputable behavior. Solving
crimes was viewed not as a police responsibility but as a private one. In
the March, 1969, Atlantic, one of us (Wilson) wrote a brief account of how
the police role had slowly changed from maintaining order to fighting
crimes. The change began with the creation of private detectives (often
ex-criminals), who worked on a contingency-fee basis for individuals who
had suffered losses. In time, the detectives were absorbed in municipal
agencies and paid a regular salary simultaneously, the responsibility for
prosecuting thieves was shifted from the aggrieved private citizen to the
professional prosecutor. This process was not complete in most places
until the twentieth century.
In the l960s, when urban riots were a major problem, social scientists
began to explore carefully the order maintenance function of the police,
and to suggest ways of improving it--not to make streets safer (its
original function) but to reduce the incidence of mass violence. Order
maintenance became, to a degree, coterminous with "community relations."
But, as the crime wave that began in the early l960s continued without
abatement throughout the decade and into the 1970s, attention shifted to
the role of the police as crime-fighters. Studies of police behavior
ceased, by and large, to be accounts of the order-maintenance function and
became, instead, efforts to propose and test ways whereby the police could
solve more crimes, make more arrests, and gather better evidence. If these
things could be done, social scientists assumed, citizens would be less
fearful.
A great deal was accomplished during this transition, as both police
chiefs and outside experts emphasized the crime-fighting function in their
plans, in the allocation of resources, and in deployment of personnel. The
police may well have become better crime-fighters as a result. And
doubtless they remained aware of their responsibility for order. But the
link between order-maintenance and crime-prevention, so obvious to earlier
generations, was forgotten.
That link is similar to the process whereby one broken window becomes
many. The citizen who fears the ill-smelling drunk, the rowdy teenager, or
the importuning beggar is not merely expressing his distaste for unseemly
behavior; he is also giving voice to a bit of folk wisdom that happens to
be a correct generalization--namely, that serious street crime flourishes
in areas in which disorderly behavior goes unchecked. The unchecked
panhandler is, in effect, the first broken window. Muggers and robbers,
whether opportunistic or professional, believe they reduce their chances
of being caught or even identified if they operate on streets where
potential victims are already intimidated by prevailing conditions. If the
neighborhood cannot keep a bothersome panhandler from annoying passersby,
the thief may reason, it is even less likely to call the police to
identify a potential mugger or to interfere if the mugging actually takes
place.
Some police administrators concede that this process occurs, but argue
that motorized-patrol officers can deal with it as effectively as foot
patrol officers. We are not so sure. In theory, an officer in a squad car
can observe as much as an officer on foot; in theory, the former can talk
to as many people as the latter. But the reality of police-citizen
encounters is powerfully altered by the automobile. An officer on foot
cannot separate himself from the street people; if he is approached, only
his uniform and his personality can help him manage whatever is about to
happen. And he can never be certain what that will be--a request for
directions, a plea for help, an angry denunciation, a teasing remark, a
confused babble, a threatening gesture.
In a car, an officer is more likely to deal with street people by rolling
down the window and looking at them. The door and the window exclude the
approaching citizen; they are a barrier. Some officers take advantage of
this barrier, perhaps unconsciously, by acting differently if in the car
than they would on foot. We have seen this countless times. The police car
pulls up to a corner where teenagers are gathered. The window is rolled
down. The officer stares at the youths. They stare back. The officer says
to one, "C'mere." He saunters over, conveying to his friends by his
elaborately casual style the idea that he is not intimidated by authority.
What's your name?" "Chuck." "Chuck who?" "Chuck Jones." "What'ya doing,
Chuck?" "Nothin'." "Got a P.O. [parole officer]?" "Nah." "Sure?" "Yeah."
"Stay out of trouble, Chuckie." Meanwhile, the other boys laugh and
exchange comments among themselves, probably at the officer's expense. The
officer stares harder. He cannot be certain what is being said, nor can he
join in and, by displaying his own skill at street banter, prove that he
cannot be "put down." In the process, the officer has learned almost
nothing, and the boys have decided the officer is an alien force who can
safely be disregarded, even mocked.
Our experience is that most citizens like to talk to a police officer.
Such exchanges give them a sense of importance, provide them with the
basis for gossip, and allow them to explain to the authorities what is
worrying them (whereby they gain a modest but significant sense of having
"done something" about the problem). You approach a person on foot more
easily, and talk to him more readily, than you do a person in a car.
Moreover, you can more easily retain some anonymity if you draw an officer
aside for a private chat. Suppose you want to pass on a tip about who is
stealing handbags, or who offered to sell you a stolen TV. In the inner
city, the culprit, in all likelihood, lives nearby. To walk up to a marked
patrol car and lean in the window is to convey a visible signal that you
are a "fink."
The essence of the police role in maintaining order is to reinforce the
informal control mechanisms of the community itself. The police cannot,
without committing extraordinary resources, provide a substitute for that
informal control. On the other hand, to reinforce those natural forces the
police must accommodate them. And therein lies the problem.
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