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Police In-Service Training

Police In-Service Training

Scott Phillips

This podcast is dedicated to providing research evidence to street-level police officers and command staff alike. The program is intended to provide research in a jargon-free manner that cuts through the noise, misinformation, and misperceptions about the police. The discussions with policing experts will help the law enforcement community create better programs, understand challenging policies, and dispel myths of police officer behavior.

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Top 10 Police In-Service Training Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best Police In-Service Training episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to Police In-Service Training for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite Police In-Service Training episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

Police In-Service Training - Episode 6: Police Hiring and Retention

Episode 6: Police Hiring and Retention

Police In-Service Training

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01/24/25 • 34 min

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Police agencies are experiencing an increased loss in staffing and complex issues when trying to fill those positions.
This week Dr. Joe Schafer from Arizona State University's School of Criminology & Criminal Justice joins the podcast to explore the issue of hiring and retention. Joe goes beyond the obvious factors, such as better pay, to discuss subtle elements of hiring and retention, such as generational considerations in how officers view the occupation, temporary assignments to relieve stress, and agency consolidation to reduce the need for officers to find job enrichment in larger departments.
Joe's report can be found at the following:
chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://morrisoninstitute.asu.edu/sites/default/files/2024-01/5%20-%20Public%20Service%20Leader%20Interviews%2B%202024.pdf

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

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Police In-Service Training - Episode 12: Policing Deaths during Active Shooter Events
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03/14/25 • 32 min

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Police officers are trained to use deadly physical force as a last resort. They are also trained to reduce their own risk of death. Active shooter events, however, require a different behavior formula. Officers are trained to move toward danger, and there is an expectation that they should “kill the killer” (as stated by a Florida Sheriff after the active shooting incident at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School). These behaviors may contribute to the deaths of police officers. Dr. Pete Blair, from Texas State University, joins us to break down these events and what might increase the survivability of police officers who respond to an active shooter event.

Main Topics
•Dr. Blair will discuss Normal Accidents and Resilience Engineering and their relation to officer behavior during these events.
•He’ll examine the common conditions that lead to officer deaths.
•Finally, Dr. Blair will discuss the changes to training that may be needed for responding to an active shooter event.

If you are interested in discussion your agency's participation in the research project I mentioned in the leadup to the podcast episode, feel free to contact me at my Buffalo State email address: [email protected]

If you are interested in the data discussed by Dr. Blair, use the link below:

https://tacticalscience.substack.com/p/updated-data-on-the-most-dangerous

Chain Survival: Responding to an Active Attack, by Dr. Blair and Dr. Martaindale, is available at Amazon (check the link below):

https://www.amazon.com/Chain-Survival-Responding-Active-Attack/dp/B0DFS3K8P8/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&sr=8-1

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

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Police In-Service Training - Episode 1: Origin Story - Police Firearms
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12/02/24 • 17 min

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Why am I spending time on a podcast for the police? I want to get officers and command staff information that can help them in their jobs. This first episode explains the goals of this podcast, and since I'm discussing the origins of this idea, I decided to start with a conversation about police firearms. We think the police have been carrying sidearms forever, but that's not true. The police have been responding to their work environment with increased firepower simply because that's what they've been up against. Cops are not "boys with toys." It has been inevitable that police would carry increased firepower because things have simply evolved that way.
If you're interested in the article on the history of police firearms, here's the title (send me an email and I'll send you the PDF version):
Phillips, S. W. (2021). A historical examination of police firearms. The Police Journal, 94(2), 122-137.

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

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Police In-Service Training - Episode 11: Contagious Fire

Episode 11: Contagious Fire

Police In-Service Training

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03/07/25 • 31 min

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Whenever a police officer fires their weapon at another person it is important to understand why. What were the conditions that lead to the shooting? Explaining why a single officer shoots two or three times is important but explaining why three or four officers empty their clips seems to be a completely different question.
To better understand the idea of something called “contagious fire” we are joined today by Eric Dlugolenski from Central Connecticut State University.
Main Topics
•We’ll discuss the importance of studying contagious fire even if it’s a rare event.
•Eric will explain the use of video simulators to study officer shooting behavior.
•I also ask Eric to clarify the difference between shooting “errors” and justifications.

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

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Police In-Service Training - Episode 3: Policing Humor

Episode 3: Policing Humor

Police In-Service Training

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12/09/24 • 34 min

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"Policing Humor" can be interpreted in two ways. First, the cops are cracking down on jokes or anyone trying to be a "funny guy." Second, and correctly, the notion that policing expose officers to a lot of funny situations. But there is utility in humor, and we'll examine this in the podcast. Further, attempts to take away the ability for officers to crack jokes with each other can have negative effects on officers and policing in general.
I'm joined by S. Marlon Gayadeen from Buffalo State University who will bring some depth to the idea that policing (as with other stressful jobs), to some extent, requires humor.
S. Marlon Gayadeen is an associate professor in the Department of Criminal Justice at SUNY Buffalo State University. His research interests are anchored in sociological (classical, contemporary & organizational) and criminological theoretical frameworks. Government agencies and criminal justice practitioners have utilized his insights on crime causation.
If you are interested in reading the article that we discuss, I can provide a PDF version (Gayadeen, S. M., & Phillips, S. W. (2016). Donut time: the use of humor across the police work environment. Journal of Organizational Ethnography, 5(1), 44-59).

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

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Police In-Service Training - Episode 8: Academy Training

Episode 8: Academy Training

Police In-Service Training

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02/07/25 • 27 min

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In recent years there has been a small shift in how the police should frame their goals, and how police academies should train new recruits. The “guardian” approach to policing emphasizes community service, democracy, procedural justice, and de-escalation.

Shifting from a warrior training framework to a guardian framework may be a false dichotomy choice. Both frameworks are like the opposite sides of a coin: both are necessary to make the coin. It may be media "copiganda" that forces the warrior perspective on the police and the public.

Joining us on the podcast to discuss a shifting focus for the police training academy is Dr. Beck Strah, who is an Assistant Professor in the School of Justice Studies at Roger Williams University. He serves as the primary investigator on a statewide evaluation of Rhode Island’s Crisis Intervention Teams training programs. Dr. Strah is a 2020 graduate of Northeastern University.

Beck also hosts a podcast called Prison Breakdown where we discuss prison news, issues, and history.

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

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Police In-Service Training - Episode 2: Police Officer Involved Shootings
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12/02/24 • 34 min

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In this episode we speak with Steven Bishopp, a Major in the Dallas Police Department. Steve has been with the DPD for over 30 years. Currently, he leads the R&D division, which handles police crime numbers from the reports officers do in the field. He also leads the department's UCR/NIBRS team, which validates offense and arrest data under NIBRS rules and submits monthly data to Texas DPS/FBI NIBRS. Steve earned a Ph.D. from UT Dallas, and has been published many times on a variety of subjects. If you'd like to track down some of the research we discuss in this podcast, please contact me and I'll try to send you some PDFs.
Here are some of the articles we discussed:
Dae-Young Kim, Scott W. Phillips, & Stephen Bishopp. (2021). Exploring the police use of force continuum with a partial proportional odds model. Policing: An International Journal, 45(2), 252-265.
John L. Worrall, Stephen A. Bishopp, Scott C. Zinser, Andrew P. Wheeler, & Scott W. Phillips. (2018). Exploring bias in police shooting decisions with real shoot/don’t shoot cases. Crime & Delinquency, 64(9), 1171-1192.
Worrall, J. L., Bishopp, S. A., & Terrill, W. (2021). The effect of suspect race on police officers’ decisions to draw their weapons. Justice Quarterly, 38(7), 1428-1447.

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

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Police In-Service Training - Police In-Service Training Podcast Trailer
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11/26/24 • 1 min

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A short trailer describing the podcast.

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

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Police In-Service Training - Episode 5: Procedural Justice

Episode 5: Procedural Justice

Police In-Service Training

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01/10/25 • 28 min

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Procedural Justice is more than a simple buzzword. It is related to police legitimacy, de-escalation, hot spots policing, and organizational justice.
This week we talk with Dr. Justin Nix, a Distinguished Associate Professor in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Nebraska Omaha, where he teaches classes on policing and coordinates the Master of Arts degree program. Justine offers a solid discussion of Procedural Justice basics, but also delves into empowerment hypothesis and legal estrangement.

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

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Police In-Service Training - Episode 7: Artificial Intelligence in Policing
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01/31/25 • 32 min

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Technological advancements have always found their way into policing, and Artificial Intelligence is no exception.
Dr. Ian Adams joins the podcast today to discuss some of the seminal research exploring AI in policing. Ian is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of South Carolina. Ian is also a 2023 National Institute of Justice LEADS (Law Enforcement Advancing Data and Science) Academic, and he is the Managing Editor for Police Practice & Research: An International Journal. In a prior life Ian was a police officer who worked in Utah.
Beyond simple questions of "does AI work to make policing more efficient?," Ian explains that AI can accidentally do a better job in some parts of policing, but this may open the door to legal questions about the development of suspicion.

Don't forget to like, FOLLOW, and share. Sharing this podcast or an episode is one of the best complements I can receive, which will help grow the show.
And don't forget to provide a review. Giving five stars is never a bad idea.
Feel free to email me your comments using the "send us a text" option, or at the following email address: [email protected]
Bluesky: @policeinservice.bsky.social

bookmark
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FAQ

How many episodes does Police In-Service Training have?

Police In-Service Training currently has 14 episodes available.

What topics does Police In-Service Training cover?

The podcast is about Law Enforcement, Society & Culture, Podcasts and Police.

What is the most popular episode on Police In-Service Training?

The episode title 'Episode 7: Artificial Intelligence in Policing' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on Police In-Service Training?

The average episode length on Police In-Service Training is 29 minutes.

How often are episodes of Police In-Service Training released?

Episodes of Police In-Service Training are typically released every 7 days.

When was the first episode of Police In-Service Training?

The first episode of Police In-Service Training was released on Nov 26, 2024.

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