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Tác giả: Kenneth Peak, Larry Gaines, Ronald Glensor
NXB: Pearson
Chi tiết sản phẩm
Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations. Ronald W. Glensor has spent much of his life in places where curiosity, risk, and human behavior intersect. A retired police executive, military veteran, educator, and author, he writes for readers who enjoy exploring serious questions without feeling as though they have been assigned homework. Ron served as Assistant Chief of the Reno Police Department and spent more than thirty years in military service, beginning with the United States Marine Corps and later serving in the Nevada Air National Guard. His assignments included tours at the Pentagon involving the expansion of MQ-9 Predator unmanned aerial vehicle assets to bases across the United States. His work also carried him overseas. As one of ten Americans selected for a research fellowship in the United Kingdom, he studied crime victimization and taught repeat victimization strategies to constabularies across the country. Beginning in 2012, he worked in Ukraine before, during, and after the Maidan uprising, helping develop the country’s new patrol police during a period of extraordinary change. His international work also included police reform efforts in Armenia. Ron is the co-author of college textbooks on policing, homeland security, criminal justice, and problem-solving, with four new editions appearing in 2026. His books for general readers grow from the same lifelong curiosity, but move well beyond the classroom into humor, crime, exploration, and the mysteries that continue to pull at the human imagination. In Flushing Back: A Whirlwind Journey Through Generations, Ron takes a humorous look at the clothing, technology, food, slang, and everyday experiences that each generation once thought were perfectly normal. His newest book, Why Aliens Won’t Stop at Earth for Gas: Are We Alone in the Universe?, turns his attention toward the cosmos. Beginning with Voyager and the Golden Record, he explores the search for life beyond Earth, the enormous difficulty of traveling between stars, and the possibility that our remarkable planet may not be an obvious destination for anyone else. Ron writes with the perspective of someone who has spent a lifetime studying people, traveling widely, confronting difficult realities, and never losing the urge to look up and wonder what may still be out there. Read more about this author Read less about this author Read more about this author Read less about this author
About the AuthorAbout our authorsKen Peak is professor and former chairman of the Department of Criminal Justice, University of Nevada, Reno, where he was named “Teacher of the Year” by the university’s Honor Society. He entered municipal policing in Kansas in 1970 and subsequently held positions as a nine-county criminal justice planner in Kansas; director of a four-state Technical Assistance Institute for the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration; director of university police at Pittsburg State University (Kansas); acting director of public safety, University of Nevada, Reno; and assistant professor of criminal justice at Wichita State University.He has published 33 textbooks (on general and community policing, criminal justice administration, police supervision and management, and women in law enforcement), two historical books (on Kansas temperance and bootlegging), and more than 60 additional journal articles and invited book chapters. He served as chairman of the Police Section of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences and president of the Western and Pacific Association of Criminal Justice Educators. He received two gubernatorial appointments to statewide criminal justice committees while residing in Kansas and holds a doctorate from the University of Kansas.Larry K. Gaines currently is a professor and chair of the Criminal Justice Department at California State University at San Bernardino. He received his doctorate in criminal justice from Sam Houston State University. He has police experience with the Kentucky State Police and the Lexington, Kentucky, Police Department. Additionally, he served as the executive director of the Kentucky Association of Chiefs of Police for 14 years. Dr. Gaines is also a past president of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. His research centers on policing and drugs.In addition to numerous articles, he has coauthored books in the field: Police Operations; Police Administration; Managing the Police Organization; Community Policing: A Contemporary Perspective; Policing Perspectives: An Anthology; Policing in America; Drugs, Crime, and Justice; Criminal Justice in Action; and Readings in White Collar Crime. His current research agenda involves the evaluation of police tactics in terms of their effectiveness in reducing problems and fitting within the community policing paradigm. He is also researching the issue of racial profiling in various California cities.Ronald W. Glensor is an assistant chief (retired) of the Reno, Nevada, Police Department (RPD). He has accumulated more than 36 years of police experience and commanded the department’s patrol, administration and detective divisions. In addition to being actively involved in RPD’s implementation of community-oriented policing and problem-solving since 1987, he has provided such training to thousands of officers, elected officials and community members representing jurisdictions throughout the US as well as Canada, Australia, and the UK. He is also a judge for the Herman Goldstein International Problem Oriented Policing Awards held annually throughout the nation.Dr. Glensor was the 1997 recipient of the prestigious Gary P. Hayes Award, conferred by the Police Executive Research Forum, recognizing his contributions and leadership in the policing field. Internationally, he is a frequently featured speaker on a variety of policing issues. He served a six-month fellowship as problem-oriented policing coordinator with the Police Executive Research Forum in Washington, DC, and received an Atlantic Fellowship in public policy, studying repeat victimization at the Home Office in London.He is coauthor of Police Supervision and Management in an Era of Community Policing, 3rd Edition, and was coeditor of Policing Communities: Understanding Crime and Solving Problems. Dr. Glensor has also published in several journals and trade magazines, is an adjunct professor at the University of Nevada, Reno, and instructs at area police academies and criminal justice programs. He holds a doctorate in political science and a Master of Public Administration from the University of Nevada, Reno.
About our authorsKen Peak is professor and former chairman of the Department of Criminal Justice, University of Nevada, Reno, where he was named “Teacher of the Year” by the university’s Honor Society. He entered municipal policing in Kansas in 1970 and subsequently held positions as a nine-county criminal justice planner in Kansas; director of a four-state Technical Assistance Institute for the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration; director of university police at Pittsburg State University (Kansas); acting director of public safety, University of Nevada, Reno; and assistant professor of criminal justice at Wichita State University.
Thông tin sách: Managing and Leading Today's Police: Challenges, Best Practices, Case Studies (Paperback, 320 trang) – Pearson, 2018. Ngôn ngữ: Tiếng Anh.
For courses in police administration and management.
A problem-solving approach to modern police leadership
Managing and Leading Today's Police: Challenges, Best Practices, and Case Studiesprovides a comprehensive insider’s view into the challenging work of police leaders at all levels of management. Using a problem-based learning approach, the authors draw on their extensive practical experience to critique the organizational, personnel, and operational issues facing police agencies and to assert “what works” in contemporary police management. The 4th edition is a major revision, moving from a supervision to a management perspective. It covers new policing strategies, methods, and technologies transforming the field and demanding new knowledge of police supervisors, managers, and leaders.
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