Ethnic Profiling in Europe
Bulgaria: Promoting Prosecutorial Accountability
Nigeria: Monitoring Police Conduct During Elections
Peru: Citizen Councils for Police Accountability
South Africa: Enhancing Police Accountability
The Justice Initiative’s work in the field of Criminal Justice and Public Security promotes the state’s ability to secure order and administer justice so as to protect individual rights, promote public security and create an open and responsive criminal justice system. In many countries fear of crime is abetted by citizens’ lack of confidence in the capacity of the criminal justice system to apprehend and successfully prosecute perpetrators of serious criminal activity. The breakdown in public trust is often aggravated by a culture of impunity which shields abusive law enforcement agents, resource and personnel shortages, and a historical legacy of institutional loyalty to political authorities.
Some reformers argue that there are important linkages between increased police (and to a lesser extent prosecutorial) accountability and increased effectiveness—especially in improving citizens’ sense of safety and possibly also in reducing criminal conduct. This perspective is hotly debated. Other theorists and many law enforcement agents contend that over-emphasizing civil rights and constraints on police power may impede effective police work, by inducing more risk-averse behavior among individual officers.
In practice, crime-ridden societies often channel government resources towards tactical interventions designed to have rapid impacts impacts—at least on public perceptions of the seriousness of government efforts. However, many “tough on crime” strategies neglect or weaken police and prosecutorial accountability. Moreover, security measures tend to assist those with economic and political influence, rarely benefiting poorer social sectors and sometimes actively targeting them as “hotbeds of crime.” Criminal justice reforms are frequently abandoned or undergo radical mid-course shifts in direction due to opposition by criminal justice agencies, unclear policy during periods of political transition, or governments’ felt need to respond to public frustration and concern.
In view of the foregoing, Justice Initiative projects are guided by the following objectives:
In the area of policing reform we pursue these goals through three principal kinds of activities: