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9 - Research and innovation in the field of security: a nodal governance view

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Jennifer Wood
Affiliation:
Research Fellow, International Centre for Security and Justice, Regulatory Institutions Network (RegNet), Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University
Jennifer Wood
Affiliation:
Australian National University, Canberra
Benoît Dupont
Affiliation:
Université de Montréal
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Summary

Introduction

There is much talk in the field of security, as in other fields of governance, of the need to design and implement innovations and to diffuse them from one context or site to another. Broadly speaking, an innovation is ‘an idea, practice, or object perceived as new by an individual or other unit of adoption’ (Rogers 1995: 35 cited in Nutley and Davies 2000: 35). New organizational approaches within and across a variety of fields have become marketable commodities in our global era. In the area of security governance there has been an ‘international trade in ways of understanding, and acting upon, more mundane, local, volume crimes’ (Stenson and Edwards 2004: 211) as exemplified in the widespread diffusion of ‘Compstat’-like programs across and beyond the United States (Weisburd et al. 2003). As well, models of ‘community policing’ are being marketed as service delivery ‘packages’ for improving crime prevention and enhancing public perceptions of safety (Wood and Font 2004).

The design and diffusion of innovations is, or should be, based on explanatory analyses of those sites wherein change or transformation is to take place combined with comprehensive assessments (instrumental and/or normative) of what exactly should be transformed and how. However, many scholars grapple with the question of whether, and to what extent, one can adequately describe and assess those sites that are to adopt innovations, particularly foreign locales characterized by unique social, political and cultural contexts (see Cohen 1982).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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