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Broken Windows (page 7)
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Though citizens can do a great deal, the police are plainly the key to
order maintenance. For one thing, many communities, such as the Robert
Taylor Homes, cannot do the job by themselves. For another, no citizen in
a neighborhood, even an organized one, is likely to feel the sense of
responsibility that wearing a badge confers. Psychologists have done many
studies on why people fail to go to the aid of persons being attacked or
seeking help, and they have learned that the cause is not "apathy" or
"selfishness" but the absence of some plausible grounds for feeling that
one must personally accept responsibility. Ironically, avoiding
responsibility is easier when a lot of people are standing about. On
streets and in public places, where order is so important, many people are
likely to be "around," a fact that reduces the chance of any one person
acting as the agent of the community. The police officer's uniform singles
him out as a person who must accept responsibility if asked. In addition,
officers, more easily than their fellow citizens, can be expected to
distinguish between what is necessary to protect the safety of the street
and what merely protects its ethnic purity.
But the police forces of America are losing, not gaining, members. Some
cities have suffered substantial cuts in the number of officers available
for duty. These cuts are not likely to be reversed in the near future.
Therefore, each department must assign its existing officers with great
care. Some neighborhoods are so demoralized and crime-ridden as to make
foot patrol useless; the best the police can do with limited resources is
respond to the enormous number of calls for service. Other neighborhoods
are so stable and serene as to make foot patrol unnecessary. The key is to
identify neighborhoods at the tipping point--where the public order is
deteriorating but not unreclaimable, where the streets are used frequently
but by apprehensive people, where a window is likely to be broken at any
time, and must quickly be fixed if all are not to be shattered.
Most police departments do not have ways of systematically identifying
such areas and assigning officers to them. Officers are assigned on the
basis of crime rates (meaning that marginally threatened areas are often
stripped so that police can investigate crimes in areas where the
situation is hopeless) or on the basis of calls for service (despite the
fact that most citizens do not call the police when they are merely
frightened or annoyed). To allocate patrol wisely, the department must
look at the neighborhoods and decide, from first-hand evidence, where an
additional officer will make the greatest difference in promoting a sense
of safety.
One way to stretch limited police resources is being tried in some public
housing projects. Tenant organizations hire off-duty police officers for
patrol work in their buildings. The costs are not high (at least not per
resident), the officer likes the additional income, and the residents feel
safer. Such arrangements are probably more successful than hiring private
watchmen, and the Newark experiment helps us understand why. A private
security guard may deter crime or misconduct by his presence, and he may
go to the aid of persons needing help, but he may well not intervene--that
is, control or drive away--someone challenging community standards. Being
a sworn officer--a "real cop"--seems to give one the confidence, the sense
of duty, and the aura of authority necessary to perform this difficult
task.
Patrol officers might be encouraged to go to and from duty stations on
public transportation and, while on the bus or subway car, enforce rules
about smoking, drinking, disorderly conduct, and the like. The enforcement
need involve nothing more than ejecting the offender (the offense, after
all, is not one with which a booking officer or a judge wishes to be
bothered). Perhaps the random but relentless maintenance of standards on
buses would lead to conditions on buses that approximate the level of
civility we now take for granted on airplanes.
But the most important requirement is to think that to maintain order in
precarious situations is a vital job. The police know this is one of their
functions, and they also believe, correctly, that it cannot be done to the
exclusion of criminal investigation and responding to calls. We may have
encouraged them to suppose, however, on the basis of our oft-repeated
concerns about serious, violent crime, that they will be judged
exclusively on their capacity as crime-fighters. To the extent that this
is the case, police administrators will continue to concentrate police
personnel in the highest-crime areas (though not necessarily in the areas
most vulnerable to criminal invasion), emphasize their training in the law
and criminal apprehension (and not their training in managing street
life), and join too quickly in campaigns to decriminalize "harmless"
behavior (though public drunkenness, street prostitution, and pornographic
displays can destroy a community more quickly than any team of
professional burglars).
Above all, we must return to our long-abandoned view that the police ought
to protect communities as well as individuals. Our crime statistics and
victimization surveys measure individual losses, but they do not measure
communal losses. Just as physicians now recognize the importance of
fostering health rather than simply treating illness, so the police--and
the rest of us--ought to recognize the importance of maintaining, intact,
communities without broken windows.