Abstract

Community policing is a strategic consideration for contemporary policing, especially when police organisations worldwide increasingly seek cost-effective and sustainable methods of combating crime. The principle of community policing recognises the community and its leaders as equal partners in the prevention and reduction of crime. Hence, there is a need for research to interrogate how different police organisations have considered community policing as a panacea to their policing challenges. This study sought to evaluate the role of traditional leaders in community policing and crime prevention in the community of Chief Madliwa, Nkayi District in Matabeleland North Province of Zimbabwe. Interviews were carried out with eight village heads, four headmen and three key informants. Four focus group discussions were conducted to collect the villagers’ insight on the role of traditional leaders in community policing and crime prevention. Participants were identified using purposive and convenience sampling. The findings revealed that community policing is an effective strategy for crime prevention and that traditional leaders play a pivotal role in the success of community policing and crime prevention. Traditional leaders play an integral role in the recruitment of members of the Neighbourhood Watch Committee, assist with organising the business community to cooperate with the police in the fight against crime and play an important role in organising the community to attend crime awareness campaigns arranged by the police.

Highlights

  • Community policing is a strategy that involves citizens in the design, implementation and evaluation of law enforcement programmes (Friedmann 1996)

  • The study concluded that community policing is effective in facilitating the prevention and reduction of crime under Chief Madliwa in the Nkayi district of Zimbabwe

  • The Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) has forged a strong partnership with traditional leaders to create robust community policing and crime prevention initiatives in the community

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Summary

Introduction

Community policing is a strategy that involves citizens in the design, implementation and evaluation of law enforcement programmes (Friedmann 1996). Traditional leaders are known for influencing ethical conduct of their subjects by setting binding communal norms, mores, values and systems. They exercise the power of sanction, which is bestowed on them by their role as traditional leaders. The Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment Act (No 20) of 2013, and the Traditional Leaders Act of 1988, modified in 1999 (Chapter 29:17) recognise and outline the roles of traditional leaders under Zimbabwean law. Their role is customarily auspicious and predates the Western colonial legal systems on which current laws are codified. It is imperative that a traditional leader is defined in the context of their customary, social, leadership and cultural roles

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