Atzealdea Opening Doors: The Logan Police/Ethnic Communities Partnerships Project

Building trust between police and ethnic minority communities

Logan City was growing rapidly and overseas migration and there was concern that levels of trust between young migrants and the Police were very low.

After some public conflict, parents and ethnic community elders asked the NGO MultiLink to facilitate a meeting between police, young people and parents/elders. This started a partnership between MultiLink, Logan Police District and people from more than 30 ethnic communities. In total, more than 700 people were involved. On average there were 20 community members and 10-15 police in attendance.

In some cases communities that had been in conflict in their country of origin were involved in the same workshop. However, at no time was that conflict brought into a workshop and an intercultural opportunity was created for people from those different ethnic groups to meet and form meaningful, long term relationships. Generally, running the meetings in a cross-community way would leave little time for each community to tell their story and bring diverse perspectives within the community.

The participation of high-ranking police was important to reinforce the Police hierarchy’s commitment to fairness and non-discriminatory community policing and to get approval to pay police officers to attend as part of their usual working hours.

The project’s results were a greater focus on community policing via relationships, stronger interaction between young people and police, stronger reliance on police and elders for knowledge and community intelligence. The same methodology and results occurred in the areas of child protection, education, health and family services.

How did they do it? Sessions were held between 6pm and 9pm during which:

  • the community provided information about their country of origin and migration history;
  • a dinner took place so community members and police could build networks, exchange phone numbers etc. so that an ongoing relationship could be developed;
  • The Police provided information about laws, domestic violence, driving, emergency services;
  • Special events were organised such as Police-Polynesian rugby games, police attendance at multicultural festivals, community members involvement in police activities like sports and remembrance days etc;
  • Some sessions took place in mosques, football clubs, churches, which was a critical tool for reducing barriers and offering opportunities to Police who usually would not have that experience;

The work cost approximately 6 000€ over2 years for casual staff to promote the workshops and to pay for the food prepared by community members.

2016
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