NCJ Number: |
161484  |
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Title: |
Preliminary Review of New York State Combat Programs |
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Corporate Author: |
New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services United States of America |
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Date Published: |
1993 |
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Page Count: |
53 |
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Sponsoring Agency: |
New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services Albany, NY 12203-3764 |
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Sale Source: |
New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services 4 Tower Place Albany, NY 12203-3764 United States of America |
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Type: |
Program Description (Demonstrative) |
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Language: |
English |
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Country: |
United States of America |
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Annotation: |
This report describes and analyzes New York State's Coordinated Omnibus Municipally Based Anti-Drug Teams (COMBAT), a drug reduction program funded under the Federal Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988. |
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Abstract: |
COMBAT was designed to increase police presence and actively solicit community input to address illicit drug markets and drug-related street crime in the urban areas of the targeted sites. The COMBAT program operated in 13 counties. Although program components varied in each location, the distinguishing feature of COMBAT was the formation of an antidrug partnership developed and maintained as a result of increasing interaction between the police and community members. Activities included joint police/community surveys, formal citizen training sessions, joint law enforcement/community meetings, program newsletters, youth education through Drug Abuse Resistance Education, and hotlines and other provisions for the easy transfer of information between the police and the community. COMBAT aims to enhance the quality of life, reduce drug use, and accomplish five other goals through three types of activities: (1) improved drug law offense processing, (2) enhanced police-community relations, and (3) intensified drug crime prevention. Figures, appended program and activity descriptions, and 13 references |
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Main Term(s): |
Grants or contracts |
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Index Term(s): |
Byrne program evaluation; Community crime prevention programs; Crime prevention planning; Drug law enforcement; Federal aid; New York; Police crime-prevention |
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To cite this abstract, use the following link: http://www.ncjrs.gov/App/publications/abstract.aspx?ID=161484 |
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