Policing Focused on Disorder and Disturbance of Peace is based on the “broken windows“ theory, according to which a disorder is a precursor to more serious crimes, fear of crime, and neighborhood decay [1]. This policing strategy had as its starting point the experience of New York (USA) in the 1990s, when the city’s police began to implement this strategy along with a series of organizational changes.
Disorder Policing can be applied through two main tactics: in conjunction with community policing and troubleshooting-oriented policing, or through zero tolerance strategies.
In the first case, the intervention is aimed at proactive police actions, which, based on a detailed diagnosis, define priority actions, focusing on petty crime and disorder, such as disturbance of the peace.
In the case of zero tolerance, the police tries to impose order through “tougher“ policing (application of administrative sanctions, arrests for minor offenses and misdemeanors, short-term detentions, interdiction of commercial premises, fines, etc.).
The characteristic that unites those two tactics is their focus on reducing (material and social) community disorder, understood as an instrument for preventing and/or reducing crime.