New York was once the murder capital of the world. Thanks to the zero-tolerance policing policy introduced by Giuliani, the mean

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问题     New York was once the murder capital of the world. Thanks to the zero-tolerance policing policy introduced by Giuliani, the mean streets have turned into clean ones.
ⅠThere are some aspects about the policy:
1) The policing is based on a 1983 paper called "Broken Windows", which
suggested a clamp-down on【1】______ as a way of lowering all crime.       【1】______
2) The responsibility for ways of fighting crime devolved from a centralised
【2】______to precinct commanders, and police used computers to track      【2】______
and target crime【3】______ more easily.                                   【3】______
Ⅱ This transformation attracted【4】______                                【4】______
However, some people do not like "zero tolerance".
reasons:
1) It implies a lack of tolerance for any deviation from【5】______        【5】______
2) The【6】______ is exactly what zero-tolerance policing encourages.      【6】______
3) The crime rates spiral up and down in unexplained cycles and they are
no【7】______ to reducing crime.                                           【7】______
4) The drop in crime had to come with the introduction of almost any new
tough police policy, because【8】______ was so high.                       【8】______
5) The zero-tolerance policing is a dangerous fad that risks creating an
arrogant police force because it gives police【9】______                   【9】______
There are also some persons supporting the policy.
reasons:
But police president O’ Connor calls zero-tolerance policing a "win-win solution". Other factors must be considered for long-term solutions. Highlighting New York’ s success provides【10】______. to police and the communities themselves that                                 【10】______
crime can be stopped.
【6】
Zero-tolerance Policing Policy
   Hello, everybody, today we will talk about the zero-tolerance policing policy in New York. As we all know, New York was once the murder capital of the world. But its urban canyons are no longer the killing fields that earned the city its unenviable rifle. The annual death, which soared to a record high of 2.245 in 1990, dropped to 760 in 1997. The last time the murder rate was as low as that was 30 years previously in 1967, the year of peace and love and the flowering of hippiedom.
   With the decrease in killing has come a marked reduction in enthusiasm for other crime, such as burglaries, robberies and shootings. The old saying, crime doesn’ t pay, has taken on new life, thanks to hard-line policing introduced by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1994. Its success has been such that Giuliani, elected five years ago on a law and order platform, confidently says his city can now be seen as a leader in crime fighting. Such a claim would once have been uimaginable, but the zero-tolerance policing policy introduced by Giuliani and the two men he appointed to run the city’ s police force, former commissioner with Bratton and fotraer deputy commissioner John Timoney, has turned the mean streets into clean streets.
   New York’ s policing is based on a 1983 paper called "Broken Windows," written by American academics Janes Wison and George Kelling, which suggested a clamp-down on low-level crime as a way of lowering all crime. If a broken window in an apartment block was not fixed, it was a sign that no one cared. Soon more windows would be broken and a sense of lawlessness engendered, encouraging others to commit more crime. Cleaning up minor crime on the streets was like fixing broken windows, it said, and the flow-on effect would curb more serious crime.
   New Yorkers voted for a special tax to raise about US 1 billion (Rmb 8.2 billion) to fight crime and another 7,000 officers were added to the force. The responsibility for ways of fighting crime devolved from a centralised bureaucracy to precinct commanders, and police used computers to track and target crime trends more easily. This resulted in a much harder attitude against all crime, "zero tolerance" being the policy of not allowing or tolerating even the smallest crimes. These included begging, minor drag dealing, taggers, turnstile jumpers in the subways and all forms of anti-social behaviour on the streets. Timoney uses turnstile jumpers as an illustration of the broken windows theory at work. Police found that 22 percent of turnstile jumpers were wanted for other crimes or were able for arrest because they carried guns. "We arrested one man simply for jumping a 1 turnstile and found that he was a drug dealer carrying cocaine and 50,000 in his pockets," says Timoney.
   New York’ s transformation attracted global attention and cost Bratton and Timoney their jobs. They were both sacked by Giuliani, who felt they were stealing his glory. Timoney has since acted as a consultant to police throughout the world, preaching the benefits of zero-tolerance policing..
   Ironically, Bratton, the former Boston beat cop who rose to head Now York’ s finest, evidently doesn’t like the term zero-tolerance because he thinks it implies a lack of tolerance for any deviation from social norms. Critics of New York policing say that intolerance is exactly what zero-tolerance policing encourages. They point out that urban crime has fallen right across the United States in the past five years not just in New York, and even in states where zero-tolerance policing is not practised, while the country’ s jail population has dramatically increased. Shifts in the nature of America’ s population ages and character have reduced the number of yound men (aged 18-24) most likely to best involved in crime. Crime is also reduced when many more criminals are in jail.
   Criminologist Greg Newbold says that crime rates spiral up and down in unexplained cycles and they are no easy solutions to reducing crime. Together sentences and more police mean an increasing drain on tax-payers and there is no certainty that they wig continue to lower crime levels. Criminals will learn to live with those methods and find ways around them.
   Charles Pollard, the chief constable of Thames Valley in Britain, calls zero-tolerance policing a short-term care that works well in urban areas with large amounts of petty crime. Once petty crime is brought under control, he told the Economist, sharp drops in crime will diminish. Observers say the drop in New York crime had to come with the introduction of almost any new tough police policy, because the crime rate was so high.
   Police Association President Greg O’ Connor agrees. "You can talk all the theories you like but, at the end of the day, what will stop criminals from committing crime is the belief that they will be caught. With only 18 percent of burglaries are being solved, and most of them don’ t believe they will be caught, burglary becomes something of a risk-free occupation."
    However, criminologist Newbold argues that zero-tolerance policing is a dangerous fad that risks creating an arrogant police force because it gives police extraordinary powers. Accusations that New York police harassed minorities were heightened last year when two white New York policemen were charged with the beating and sexual torture of Asian immigrant Abner Louima, and two other white officers were charged with assaulting him in a police car. One policeman allegedly told Louima, "It’ s Giuliani time".
    But police president O’ Connor says that the broken windows approach doesn’t necessarily lead to police harassment. He calls zero-tolerance policing a "win-win solution". Other factors must be considered for long-term solutions, "but, ff you don’ t catch criminals, you can’ t rehabilitate them. All the initiatives have to work but you have to ask, ’will they impact on crime?’ and you have to bargain from a position of strength. If you’ re talking to kids who don’ t think they are going to get caught and who think the police are a joke, then forget it."
   Highlighting New York’ s success provides a subtle message to police and the communities themselves that crime can be stopped.

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