『New View Police Podcast』のカバーアート

New View Police Podcast

著者: Dr. Paul Taylor
  • サマリー

  • The New View Police Podcast provides a fresh no holds barred perspective on policing in the United States. 

    The New View Manifesto:

    1. Policies, procedures and training for high-risk, complex and unpredictable work (no matter how good they are) NEVER fully account for how this work actually gets done.

    2. Policies, procedures and training are how administrators, managers and trainers (no matter how experienced they are) imagine high-risk complex work is or should be done from positions that are insulated from the risks, complexities and uncertainties of the work itself.

    3. Workers must translate and transfer the abstract, overly simplistic, linear and incomplete policies, procedures and training of imagined work to the complex, high-risk, unpredictable problems of actual work in order to achieve good outcomes... and they almost always succeed!

    4. Workers in high-risk, complex and unpredictable work environments often achieve good outcomes in spite of policies, procedures and training... not because of them.

    5. Safety in high-risk, complex, unpredictable work environments comes from worker creativity, flexibility, and resilience (ability to recover from the unexpected) and not from rigid rules, perfectly specified procedures, or repetitive block training.

    People are the solution to high-risk, complex and unpredictable problems... not the problem themselves!

    P.S. This is not a criticism of policies, procedures, or training... We need all three. We just need to understand their limitations and how high risk work in complex environments actually gets done.

    © 2024 New View Police Podcast
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エピソード
  • Dr. Chuck Rylant
    2023/11/17

    Guest:

    Dr. Chuck J. Rylant has 25 years of experience and is a Federal and State Court qualified expert witness in use-of-force, de-escalation, self-defense, strangulation, memory, fight or flight, decision making, and other human performance factors. He has a Doctor of Clinical Psychology– his dissertation was entitled: Decisions Under Pressure: Psychological and Physiological Aspects of Police Use of Force. Dr. Rylant is a retired police officer/detective, S.W.A.T. member, and P.O.S.T. certified department firearms, baton, chemical agents, use of force, and arrest and control (ARCON) trainer. He is also a former police academy arrest and control (ARCON), use-of-force, and de-escalation instructor, as well as a Certified Force Science Analyst and Advanced Force Science Specialist. Dr. Rylant is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt instructor for law enforcement and civilians, as well as the author of Shots Fired: The Psychology Behind Officer Involved Shootings.

    You can learn more about Dr. Rylant and his work at his website:
    www.chuckrylant.com

    Supplemental Reading:

    Rylant, C. J. (2017). Shots Fired: The Psychology Behind Officer Involved Shootings.

    https://www.amazon.com/Shots-Fired-Psychology-Officer-Involved-Shootings/dp/B077SRFGF9

    Rylant, C. J. (2016). Motivation: Stories on Life and Success from Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Black Belts.

     https://www.amazon.com/Motivation-Stories-Success-Brazilian-Jiu-Jitsu-ebook/dp/B01LZE9NSR

    Rylant, C. J. (2019). Success: The Path to Personal Fulfillment Through Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Fighters.

    https://www.amazon.com/Success-Personal-Fulfillment-Brazilian-Jiu-Jitsu-ebook/dp/B07Q1DTCSK

    Support the New View Police Podcast:

    The New View Police Podcast is only made possible by our sponsors and by listeners like you. If you enjoyed this episode and would like to support future content, please visit our sponsors and consider making a small donation using the link below. Thank you!

    Support the show

    Sponsors of this Episode:

    The Association of Force Investigators

    https://www.forceinvestigators.com

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    1 時間 16 分
  • Weapon-Confusion Shootings
    2023/10/27

    Supplemental Reading:

    CBS News Report of Weapon-Confusion Shooting in Sauk Village, IL:

    https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/news/sauk-village-police-shooting-body-camera-unarmed-14-year-old-boy/?fbclid=IwAR3lHRrzBjkqux8zNFLVnRCfQdz16IHxaD-pbaOiKPvd9eHcQboqKvGhK_U

    Taylor, P. L. (2020). Guns and TASERs: Solving cops' 'weapon-confusion' problem. The Crime Report.

    https://thecrimereport.org/2020/08/05/guns-and-tasers-solving-cops-weapon-confusion-problem/

    Woods, D. D., Dekker, S., Cook, R., Johannesen, L., & Sarter, N. (2010). Behind Human Error (2nd Edition). Burlington, VT: Ashgate.

    https://www.amazon.com/Behind-Human-Error-David-Woods/dp/0754678342

    Martin, J. A. (2016). Applied human error theory: A police TASER-confusion shooting case study. Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting.

    https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1541931213601108

    Taylor, P. L. (2019). Beyond false positives: A typology of police shooting errors. Criminology & Public Policy, 18: 807-822.

    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/1745-9133.12460

    Support the show

    Sponsors of this Episode:

    The Association of Force Investigators

    https://www.forceinvestigators.com

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    45 分
  • Dr. Alexis Artwohl
    2023/10/13

    Note: I want to apologize for the audio quality of this episode. The interview with Dr. Artwohl was recorded while I was traveling to present a class. With that said, the insights and  information she shared during our discussion are far too important and valuable not to share.

    Guest:

    Dr. Alexis Artwohl is a retired clinical and police psychologist who provided traumatic incident debriefings to numerous public safety personnel and citizens in the Pacific Northwest. She co-authored two books with Loren Christensen, published research in the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin and the Law Enforcement Executive Forum, contributed chapters to books, and authored magazine articles. She has provided training to law enforcement and responsibly armed citizens across the country since 1990.

    You can learn more about Dr. Artwohl and her work at her website: https://www.alexisartwohl.com

    Supplemental Reading:

    Artwohl, A., & Christensen, L. W. (2019). Deadly Force Encounters (2nd Edition): Cops and Citizens Defending Themselves and Others.

    https://www.amazon.com/Deadly-Force-Encounters-Second-Themselves/dp/1650012195

    Support the New View Police Podcast:

    The New View Police Podcast is only made possible by our sponsors and by listeners like you. If you enjoyed this episode and would like to support future content, please visit our sponsors and consider making a small donation using the link below. Thank you!

    Support the show

    Sponsors of this Episode:

    The Association of Force Investigators

    https://www.forceinvestigators.com

    続きを読む 一部表示
    41 分

あらすじ・解説

The New View Police Podcast provides a fresh no holds barred perspective on policing in the United States. 

The New View Manifesto:

1. Policies, procedures and training for high-risk, complex and unpredictable work (no matter how good they are) NEVER fully account for how this work actually gets done.

2. Policies, procedures and training are how administrators, managers and trainers (no matter how experienced they are) imagine high-risk complex work is or should be done from positions that are insulated from the risks, complexities and uncertainties of the work itself.

3. Workers must translate and transfer the abstract, overly simplistic, linear and incomplete policies, procedures and training of imagined work to the complex, high-risk, unpredictable problems of actual work in order to achieve good outcomes... and they almost always succeed!

4. Workers in high-risk, complex and unpredictable work environments often achieve good outcomes in spite of policies, procedures and training... not because of them.

5. Safety in high-risk, complex, unpredictable work environments comes from worker creativity, flexibility, and resilience (ability to recover from the unexpected) and not from rigid rules, perfectly specified procedures, or repetitive block training.

People are the solution to high-risk, complex and unpredictable problems... not the problem themselves!

P.S. This is not a criticism of policies, procedures, or training... We need all three. We just need to understand their limitations and how high risk work in complex environments actually gets done.

© 2024 New View Police Podcast

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