| Research > Alaska Department of Public Safety Project > Press release 2 | ||||
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| Press release | ||||
| Public Safety in Village Alaska |
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Released
by the Justice Center, University of Alaska Anchorage Justice Center, University of Alaska Anchorage. (1995). Public Safety and Policing in Alaska Native Villages: Component Three of Alaska Public Safety Project. Report prepared for the Alaska Department of Public Safety. Anchorage, AK: Justice Center, University of Alaska Anchorage. |
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The researchers found that throughout the communities surveyed, prosecution, court, and correctional officials, in particular, were viewed as being unconcerned about local governance arrangements, practices, and problems, and insensitive to values, feelings, and priorities of village residents and officials. Few interviewees could recall a visit to their village by a local prosecutor or court or correctional official. Village officials frequently reported a nearly total absence of communication with justice system personnel who are assigned to serve their communities. Among other areas of expressed concern were the lack of knowledge on the part of Alaska justice officials of Native culture and lifestyles, tribal and Indian law, and decision-making practices of local communities; failure by justice officials to communicate with local officials about processing and charging decisions; arbitrarily developed and imposed policies and rules related to the administration of local justice; and inadequate legal consultation or advice from Alaska justice agencies. While most village officials indicated a preference for their own police or public safety officers, they also expressed a need for more Alaska State Troopers to work with them on community social and crime problems. Many of the villages surveyed were found to have established, without support from the Alaska justice system, their own policies and methods for dealing with most crime and social control problems in the communities. Despite the importance of these extralegal local practices to villages, in general they seem to be unrecognized or ignored by justice system employees who are assigned to serve communities. The following are among other findings of the study:
The Justice Center report includes quantified summaries of respondent answers to survey questions as well as transcripts of the explanatory comments from interviewees. The survey was part of a larger project conducted for the Department of Public Safety under a grant from the Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. Copies of the report Public Safety and Policing in Alaska Native Villages are available at the Justice Center Web Site, or for $11.00 from:
University of Alaska Anchorage 3211 Providence Drive Anchorage, AK 99508 Please make checks payable to Justice Center, UAA. |
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