Essay Topic Hub

Police
Essays

3,670+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

3,670 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Policing sits at the intersection of criminal justice, public administration, and political science, making it a frequent subject in government and criminology courses alike. Students are drawn to it because law enforcement agencies hold extraordinary authority over citizens, and the decisions officers make—about when to intervene, how much force to apply, and how to engage with communities—carry immediate legal, ethical, and social consequences. The topic spans everything from patrol theory and departmental organization to constitutional limits on officer conduct, giving it both practical and theoretical dimensions that reward serious academic examination.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of analytical approaches. Some tackle use-of-force questions directly, examining deadly force, non-lethal weapons, and the legal and ethical standards that govern both. Others take a historical or comparative angle, contrasting policing eras or weighing similarities between police and the populations they monitor. Case-study approaches appear as well, grounding abstract policy questions in concrete events such as the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina or the challenges of policing individuals with chronic mental illness. Additional papers look inward at institutional concerns like officer stress, patrol effectiveness, and departmental adaptation to new surveillance and communication technologies.

A strong essay on policing needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of the field—claiming that a specific policy produces measurable outcomes, for instance, is more defensible than simply describing how policing works. Evidence drawn from documented incidents, departmental data, and established legal standards tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating description with analysis; explaining what officers do is not the same as evaluating whether those practices serve the public effectively or equitably.

3,670 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
How it Promotes Sexual Violence
How Pornography Promotes Sexual Violence Against Women
Paper Doctorate
Incongruous to Try to Compare the Artists
¶ … incongruous to try to compare the artists William Shakespeare and Bob Marley. These two men, separated by centuries and embodying two very different forms of art, both make up part of the history of popular culture.
Paper Doctorate
Why government should tax spending rather than income
¶ … Government Should Tax Spending Vice Income
Research Paper Doctorate
History concepts and significance
Early in 1867, Congress passed a series of laws called the Reconstruction Acts. These laws abolished the Southern state governments formed under Johnson's plan. They also divided all the states that had seceded from the…
Thesis Undergraduate
Issues and Advocacy Framework Development on Education
Massive institutional racism and structural inequalities still exist in the United States, especially in housing, public education and the criminal justice system in inner city areas. In every urban area, the quality of education available to poor and minority students is demonstrably worse by any measure than that of their white peers in the suburbs. This type of institutional discrimination is not caused by genetic or cultural deprivation but by the fact that the U.S. has always been and remains a highly segregated and unequal society based on race and social class. Of course, this violates the liberal, egalitarian and meritocratic ideals on which the nation was (supposedly), but after all, the U.S. managed to survive with slavery for almost a hundred years after its founding, and with legal segregation and disenfranchisement of blacks for a hundred years after that. Chicago, Detroit, East St. Louis, Camden, New Jersey all have crumbling public school systems serving mostly black and Hispanic students funded at levels far below those of white suburban districts.
Paper Undergraduate
Supreme Courts 1966 Miranda Ruling Legalities and Issues
In almost all cases, the Miranda ruling of 1966 applies to police interviews with criminal suspects, although other Supreme Court decisions extend some of the rights to legal counsel and prevention of self-incrimination to public and private employers. According to the Supreme Court, the Miranda Warnings must be given prior to questioning to all persons who have been arrested and are in police custody, although one loophole "permits the police to question suspects without giving them their Miranda rights in those settings where it is unclear whether custody is present" (Wrightsman and Pitman 2010). In addition, suspects might not understand all these rights, especially because local and state police forces around the United States use hundreds of different versions of these rather than one standard set of warnings.
Essay Doctorate
Criminal Justice Administration Mainly Focuses on Crime
Abstract The essay focuses on various SLP modules assignments. The modules fall under Case and SLP categories. The module case assignments comprise different sections of a comprehensive paper that shall eventually culminate the study of the Criminal Justice Administration concentration. Among the critical sections of both the Module Case and SLP, include an introduction to key issues, enforcement issues, judiciary issues, custodial issues, and a generalized summary or conclusion of all module cases and SLPs of the Capstone paper.
Research Paper Masters
Present Status of Community Policing
This paper discusses community policing in today’s society beginning with the history and evolution of this practice as well as community-based crime prevention and patrol activities. This is followed by a discussion of decentralization of decision making, police accountability, and how citizen watch groups help the police. The other section discusses how the concept and practice of community policing emphasize order maintenance and service.
Thesis Undergraduate
Government response to the September 11 attacks
The terrorist attacks of September 11th 2001 as well as several previous acts of domestic and international terrorism sparked responses from nearly every civic agency in the United States. Each and every agency across the nation was called to action both immediately with temporary changes and in the long term with fundamental legal and policy actions that are believed to aid in the future response to disasters of both the man-made kind and natural (Glendening, 2002, p. 21). Maryland is poised in a position where challenges are inherent due in part to its close proximity to Washington DC, with Maryland surrounding two thirds of Washington DC, and because of some of the fundamentally high risk target sites within it, such as a nuclear facility and its own World Trade Center in Baltimore, long and sparsely controlled coastlines, just to name a few (21).
Paper Undergraduate
State Laws and the Rules of State Psychology Board
This paper provides an overview of the professional requirements required to become a psychologist.It discusses the difference between the ethical requirements of the APA versus state licensing boards. It also discusses ethical conflicts of interest that may occur for psychologists working in corporate and government settings. It concludes with the author's discussion of personal ethics.