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Understanding Community Safety and Well-Being

Price
$60.00

Content Provider:
Lisa Taylor

Tagged Categories:

  • Community Safety & Wellbeing
  • IDEA (Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Accessibility)
  • Systems & Standards

Language
En

Length
2 Hour(s)

Release Date
October 2024

Registration Process Register

For over 15 years there has been a growing movement in Canada towards what is now referred to as Community Safety and Well-being (CSWB). This important evolution originally stemmed from the discussions around the “Economics of Policing,” and drew upon research around bringing together the Human Service Agencies (including policing) to improve the outcomes for marginalized individuals/families.

For police much of the momentum came from the realization that increasingly, crime and victimization could not be addressed through the justice system alone. Despite strong police work, the cycles could not be broken without working across silos with the other health and social service agencies.

Today, through CSWB plans and approaches, there can be better synergy across the human service system, trust can be strengthened further amongst agencies, and CSWB can provide police with an opportunity to demonstrate that they are more than just enforcement.

When your only tool is a hammer, you often have no choice. For many agencies across the human services system, this is still often the challenge; with enforcement or mandated responses being the only tools available when incidents occur. However, through CSWB Approaches, agencies — including police — gain increased awareness, access, and connections to a toolbox with a much broader array of options, enabling them to intervene collectively and further upstream.

Disclaimer: The CSWB movement in Canada was created not in one instant, but over time, and has been iterated along the way. There are numerous individuals and organizations that have played a role in its development and its effectiveness as an umbrella approach, some more high profile than others.

The course highlights a number of key elements but recognizes that in order to be an effective learning tool and not overwhelm the learner, it cannot reference or cite all of the programs, initiatives, or models out there that come under this umbrella. It further recognizes that it cannot give credit to all the individuals who have been, and/or are, involved in this journey in one way or another

Target Audience

Sworn Police, Police Services, Student, Government and Other First Responders, Private Security

Content Provider

Content for this course was provided by Lisa Taylor (M. Des). Ms. Taylor has worked in the public safety and policing space for over 20 year and is one of the original architects of the Situation Table model and CSWB concepts.