How relationships affect local residents.
Law enforcement training officers are responsible for training recruits to perform their duties safely and responsibly. Law enforcement officers must determine how relationships affect local residents.
Imagine that you are a law enforcement training officer in a city of 620,000 diverse citizens. You are developing an overview and presentation for a new officer training program on protecting your residents without infringing on their privacy.
Identify the topic you will be presenting on. Select 1 of the following issues:
-Constitutional right to privacy
-The panopticon society
-Governmental surveillance
-Private sector online data collection
-Identity theft
-Cybercrime
-Drug testing
-DNA
-Fingerprints
-Biometric identification
Develop a word overview in which you explain what you will be presenting on. This will be handed out to the officers in the training session.
Create an 8- to 10-slide presentation with detailed speaker notes.
Include the following in your presentation:
-Identification of the issue
-Explanation of how this issue affects your diverse community
-Specific recommendations you as law enforcement officers will implement to combat these issues
-Summary of how you will protect your residents without infringing upon their privacy
Sample Answer
Topic: The Panopticon Society
Word Overview:
In this presentation, we will discuss the panopticon society, a social concept in which surveillance is used to control people. We will explore how the panopticon society affects our diverse community and how law enforcement officers can protect residents without infringing on their privacy.
Presentation:
Slide 1: Title slide
Slide 2: Introduction
The panopticon society is a concept developed by philosopher Michel Foucault in his book Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Foucault argues that the panopticon society is a type of society in which surveillance is used to control people. The panopticon is a type of prison designed so that the prisoners can be observed at all times by the guards, even though they cannot see the guards. Foucault argues that the panopticon is a metaphor for the type of society in which we live, where we are constantly being watched by the government and other powerful institutions.