Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.
The aim of this research project was to understand how the Police Local Partnership Boards (PLPBs) in Sierra Leone function, including what they achieve, and how they relate to the local community and the Sierra Leone Police (SLP). The objectives of the study were to establish:to what degree the PLPBs are representative of the local community (whether they are composed primarily of the local business or socio-economic elite) and how members are selectedto what degree the goals actively being pursued by the PLPBs are set by the community or the SLPwhether there are any hindrances to the sustainability of the PLPBsthe types of intelligence that the PLPBs provide to the SLP and how the SLP evaluate the utility of that intelligencewhether the PLPBs have brought any crime prevention benefits to the community, PLPB or SLPwhether local PLPBs vary, and the possible reasons for these variationsThe dataset comprises semi-structured qualitative interviews with local unit commanders and community police officers in four police divisions in Freetown (Sierra Leone's capital); interviews (multiple participants) with executive and general members of the PLPBs in the four divisions; and summaries of interviews held with community focus groups in the four divisions. A previous qualitative study by the same principal investigator, Multilateral Policing in Africa: its Nature and Socio-Political Impact in Uganda and Sierra Leone, 2003-2005, comparing forms of policing in the two countries, is held at the UK Data Archive under SN 5314. Further information about these studies and other research projects on African policing may be found on the principal investigator's Welcome to African Policing web site.
Main Topics:
The interviews cover: crime and crime prevention in the community; youth crime and gangs; drug problems; police services; PLPB and partnership working with SLP; perceived problems and other issues related to community policing and law enforcement; improvements and developments in policing the community, and the police-community relationship.
Purposive selection/case studies
Face-to-face interview
Focus group