Polícia Comunitária e Sistema de Administração por Objetivos na Polícia Municipal de Madrid
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47741/17943108.57Palavras-chave:
serviços policiais à comunidade, organização policial, investigação criminológica, Nova Gestão Pública, Administração por Objetivos, Polícia Municipal de MadridResumo
No âmbito da organização policial, fundamentalmente durante as décadas compreendidas entre os 70, 80 e 90, numerosas investigações criminológicas, principalmente em Estados Unidos, começaram a questionar o modelo tradicional de atuação policial. As principais críticas centraram-se em aspectos relacionados com a efetividade das estratégias policiais tradicionais, mas também no afastamento existente entre polícia e comunidade. Neste contexto e em consonância com o auge das políticas neoliberais apoiadas na Nova Gestão Pública, as organizações policiais vão progressivamente incorporando sistemas de gestão do rendimento, descentralização, rendição de contas, administração por objetivos, entre outros. O presente artigo toma como estudo de caso a Polícia Municipal de Madrid e revela as contradições existentes entre o seu sistema de Administração por Objetivos e a pretendida implantação de um modelo de Polícia Comunitária. As dificuldades e deficiências se fazem evidentes devido à complexidade do sistema, à natureza quantitativa dos indicadores encarregados de medir a qualidade do trabalho, e também ao componente económico ligado ao cumprimento de tais indicadores. Tudo isso faz que um sistema a priori encarregado de melhorar a qualidade do serviço possa chegar a ser contraproducente para a própria função policial.
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