February 2006
Police managers and supervisors should receive training to ensure they are aware of
the importance of these issues and can address them effectively. The basic principles
for such training are set out under Recommendations 9 and 10 above. Capability for
dealing with multi-ethnic policing issues should also be taken into account in the
selection procedure for promotion into senior ranks in the police hierarchy.
As is emphasized under Recommendation 7, the ultimate goal should be that, through
firm and consistent leadership and management on these issues, a cultural change in
the police organization comes about over a period of years. Only then will the
organization itself become a genuinely multi-ethnic, professional and non-partisan
body, for which operating fairly and effectively in a multi-ethnic environment is a
matter of routine.
IV. ENGAGING WITH ETHNIC COMMUNITIES
12. Police should be tasked with developing methods and practices to
communicate and co-operate with minorities and to build confidence together
at local, regional and national levels.
A democratic service-oriented approach to policing in general, and a community
policing approach in particular, require regular and effective communication between
police and citizens. Effective policing in a democratic society must be based not on
fear, but on consent. Police need the support of the public to carry out their work, not
simply because of the need to be democratically accountable, but also because the
practical co-operation of the public (e.g. in providing intelligence, reporting crime,
acting as witnesses, and so on) is essential for the performance of the police role. In
any democratic State, therefore, police need to establish methods and practices to
communicate with the public at all levels and win their confidence.
Police in a multi-ethnic society face an additional challenge. Communication and
confidence-building needs to reach out to a variety of minority groups, which may be
diverse in terms of language, culture, religion and other circumstances, and which
may be dispersed or residentially concentrated. Moreover, some of these groups may
have experienced discrimination or other forms of oppression at the hands of the state
in the past, including at the hands of the police, and may therefore continue to bear a
strong sense of distrust towards police. Police therefore need to make sure that the
methods and practices they use to communicate with the public take account of this
24