Article
18 minute read 30 March 2021

Law enforcement for a post-2020 world

Growing challenges require a change in policing perspectives

John Adams

John Adams

United States

Mike Gelles

Mike Gelles

United States

Ken Croke

Ken Croke

United States

Joe Mariani

Joe Mariani

United States

Adam Routh, PhD.

Adam Routh, PhD.

United States

To move forward from the challenges of 2020, law enforcement needs to consider new policing strategies that are nationally driven, yet tailored to local conditions—likely requiring a shift in policing culture to succeed.

The imperative for change

The first half of 2020 exposed the strengths and weaknesses of law enforcement perhaps as never before; it laid bare the full extent of the tension between increasingly overstretched law enforcement and communities that feel disadvantaged by current models of policing. Existing drivers of change such as emerging technologies and social change have only been accelerated by COVID-19 and the renewed focus on racial equities. The result was a compounding effect that stressed existing models of policing to the breaking point.1

For law enforcement to move forward and continue to meet the evolving needs of communities, it should consider new, more agile models of policing better suited to the 21st century. With a new focus on change at the federal and many state levels, now may be the perfect moment for these new models of policing.2 Yet, new models of policing represent significant innovations, and thus their successful adoption depends on a culture in law enforcement that is willing to adapt. While creating this culture can seem a monumental task, by focusing on a few key areas such as training, leadership, and organizational structure, law enforcement can reshape itself to be more equitable and effective.

Even the best need to change

Back in 2019, we examined the forces shaping the future of law enforcement.3 Given the challenging events of 2020, that can easily seem like a decade ago. Yet while certainly much has changed in the past year, the underlying drivers of change for law enforcement remain consistent. The forces of both technological and social change continue to push and pull on law enforcement, changing everything from recruitment to the nature of calls for service (figure 1).

These drivers are tectonic forces. They are neither good nor bad, but they are shifting the very ground below law enforcement. The result is that organizations need to adapt. Even organizations operating at their best, with solid community relations, should account for these drivers or risk becoming ineffective. Just as effective policing tactics from the 1870s would not work today—imagine a sheriff today in a gun duel at high noon—today’s effective tactics may not be effective in even a few years. So while this year’s pandemic response and social unrest have strained traditional models of policing to the limit, they ultimately show that more is possible.

Toward new policing models

So what can a more resilient, agile, and equitable model of policing look like? First, it is unlikely to be just one model. With more than 18,000 unique police agencies across the country, there is likely no single solution that will work in each of those unique communities. The variability in policing across America is striking. Not only are departments in small towns very different from those in large cities, but even between communities of the same size, what citizens expect of their police can vary widely. Yet, despite these differences, the strains of social and technological shifts are exposing similar cracks across departments of all sizes, in different locations. Looking at those strains, a few key factors that a successful policing model would likely need to do emerge:

Be networked

Today’s uneven world can be challenging for police. One moment officers can be in the middle of a domestic dispute, the next working with school children, and the next working in large-scale demonstrations. With staffing shortages forcing cutbacks on specialized staff, often the very same officer may be asked to respond to all three of those situations. This rapid change in situations can call for very different tactics and mindsets, challenging the traditional pyramid management structure of many departments. It can be difficult for leaders to gather information about what is happening on the street, and respond fast enough with decisions, commands, and resources.

The solution for organizations such as investment banks and military units that have faced a similar challenge has been to abandon pyramidal organizational structures and become networks.4 For law enforcement, the patrol officer would be at the center of a network with connections to other patrol officers, resources for support, and so on (figure 2). Individual officers are empowered to make decisions and call upon resources based on the fast-changing situations they see in front of them. But this does not mean just leaving individual officers to their own devices. The job of leadership shifts as well, away from command and control and toward ensuring that each officer is making the right decisions even in the absence of direct guidance.5 This can happen by ensuring that the values and culture of the organization are instilled in each individual, and that each individual can make the connections necessary to be successful in their role. Management tools can then shift as well, from maps and task charts to assessments of officers’ decision-making, communication, and compassion.

While this model can sound counterintuitive at first, the results are undeniable. Organizations ranging from elite special operations forces to airlines have adopted this model and seen significant improvement in performance.6 In fact, this model is already in action on a smaller scale in law enforcement responses to fast-moving crises such as active shootings. In the early 2000s, it became clear that “isolate and negotiate” tactics that had worked with hostage-takers often resulted in more deaths in active-shooter situations.7 As a result, departments began training officers to form small teams to respond as quickly as possible. This shift gave the first officer on the scene significant decision-making power, much as a networked model of policing would do in every situation.

Be measured differently

For officers to operate differently, they will need to be evaluated differently—not just on the number of arrests or citations issued, for example. Instead, in a networked model where officers are making on-the-spot decisions, they could be evaluated on the positive outcomes of those decisions. If the desired positive outcome is safer, happier communities, agencies should find a way to measure that, not simply measure what is easy to, such as arrests or contact cards.

Tom Cowper, retired police executive and former member of Police Futurists International, sees this need for new metrics as a significant departure for many departments: “Most departments have programs to interview members of public on their satisfaction, but when you shift the focus of policing to the community, you put more responsibility on the community for guidance and direction, so the measure needs to shift to capture satisfaction of the whole community.”8

New metrics of success would also force a shift in performance management for law enforcement. The incentives for officers’ pay and promotions should be aligned to the new metrics to help ensure that officers do not slide back to old ways of doing business just to “check the box” and lose the benefit of new structures. These behavior-based performance evaluations for officers can also lead to better retention. Research has found that 90% of commercial companies that redesigned performance management to show how individual actions fit into larger group goals saw increases in employee engagement.9 Yet, many police departments are likely not collecting the types of data needed to assess officer performance, utilization, or community engagement.10 The old adage “you get what you measure” may be somewhat cliched, but progress on new policing models will be difficult without collecting new forms of data.

Be “community-defined,” not just “community-oriented”

In a network-based organization, every single node needs to know what the whole organization is trying to accomplish if it is to make decisions about how to respond to different situations. The challenge is that there is no single right definition or measure of success for law enforcement. It can only be defined by the people of a community, not by law enforcement leaders in a vacuum. As Rick Myers, who has led departments in five different states, puts it, “People in communities are not just consumers of police services but should be partners with law enforcement in setting priorities, goals, and maybe even who works in their neighborhood.”11

The shift to networked policing works best if the community helps to define what needs to be measured. Communities in big cities may be concerned about crime, making violent crime rates a key measure of success, while smaller communities with little crime to start with may be more worried about response times or other aspects of police service. Involving the community in decision-making has the added benefit of increasing transparency and trust in law enforcement.12

Admittedly, that could be a significant shift for many police and community leaders who are used to making decisions of how to measure success or allocate resources. Myers calls it “a fundamental shift in mindset that cops don’t come to work as law enforcement officers, but as an agent in helping communities solve their problems.”13 For example, officers called to a fight between neighbors about trash could do more than just make arrests. Coming to realize that trash pickup had not been regular in that area, allowing trash to pile up and cause the dispute, they could put in a call to 311 for the needed services.14

But becoming community-driven does not just benefit communities; it can benefit police as well. Research suggests that such shifts in policing model can help alleviate stress on officers and improve their job satisfaction.15 The shift to community-defined policing can also make community members important sources of information and resources to police. Perhaps most importantly in an era where law enforcement faces tough budgetary challenges, a community-driven approach can help police with challenges such as budget and staffing shortfalls.16 Trade-offs between budget size and officer coverage on the streets, or between police performing social services versus funding other agencies to fill the gap are all ultimately political decisions about what a community wants.17 Police cannot solve these trade-offs on their own; the community has to be involved in the decision-making.

Adopting new policing models: It’s all about culture

Ideas for new models of policing are not new, but existing mindsets and culture have typically stood in the way.18 This can come in the familiar form of “that’s not how we do things,” but culture can also have a subtler impact on change. If officers are always on their guard and uncomfortable, they are less likely to step out and try new things.19 So if departments want to either foster positive innovation or avoid negative behaviors, they should pay attention to organizational culture. Research from Chicago and other cities have shown that culture is a key element in transmitting excessive use of force and other undesirable behaviors from outliers to others within departments.20 In fact, the effect of culture can be so strong that it can overwhelm even the positive effect of training specifically designed to reduce those bad behaviors.21

Culture is intangible. You can’t buy more of it, and that often leads to culture being thought of as difficult to change. But the good news is that, with the right approach, culture can be changed. This change starts at the very beginning with the environment in academies and initial training. Hazing and negative tactics can set the tone for future behavior. On the other hand, a positive environment in both initial training and the workplace can reinforce the positive behaviors a department wants to see and slowly remove unhealthy ones.

Historically, aviation had many of the same cultural challenges faced by police. A strictly hierarchical structure at times led to poor practices going unchallenged or even adopted by junior personnel. That all changed in 1977, when two 747 jets collided on the island of Tenerife in the deadliest aviation disaster in history. After the crash, the aviation industry spent significant effort shifting the cockpit culture from one of unquestioned hierarchical authority to a more networked approach of crew resource management.22 A similar shift for police would allow junior officers to feel more empowered to speak up if they observed something wrong, slowly changing what behaviors are acceptable within an organization.

Yet there is one major difference between changing cockpit culture for pilots and changing law enforcement culture. In 1977, there were only 11 major US airlines, compared with more than 18,000 unique US law enforcement organizations today.23 So while cockpit culture certainly varied somewhat from airline to airline, it was likely much more homogenous than the current law enforcement culture in the United States. Through his own research on policing, Dr. Andreas Olligschlaeger sees that unevenness in culture, standards, and outcomes in US law enforcement as the first barrier that any change must overcome: “Some of the issues with the problematic ‘us vs. them’ mindset in many departments is due to the lack of national standards in policing.”24

Yet, this can lead to a paradox: National standards would seem to run counter to the community-defined approach that is the goal of culture change in the first place. Bud Levin, professor emeritus of psychology and retired police major in the small town of Waynesboro, VA, describes it this way: “There are going to be increasing calls for standardization of policing methods. Some of these will come from federal government efforts, others will come from common threats like cybercrime and foreign government surveillance, but standardizing is the antithesis of community policing. The more you do of one, the less you will have of the other. Imagine a New York City cop working in Brown County, TX, and vice versa.”25 The key to police cultural change then is to balance centralization and decentralization, to create common standards and expectations, but also to tailor the application of those standards to the unique circumstances of each community.

That balance can be hard to strike, and culture change in the best of circumstances can be hard. The most successful instances of culture change feature a burning platform, a crisis that forces everyone to accept that the status quo cannot continue. In aviation safety, this was the massive loss of life in the Tenerife disaster. For law enforcement, 2020 could be that burning platform. COVID-19, protests, and struggles with racial equity have shown that the status quo in law enforcement cannot continue. Yet, there are positive signs as well. In dealing with COVID-19, many departments are practicing exactly the flexibility and collaboration the future policing models may require. In the words of Michael Buerger, professor of criminal justice at Bowling Green State University, “Adapting to the need for gloves and masks was important for officer safety, but the need to coordinate with other agencies/government structures to properly fulfill the mission to protect and serve has been one of the most important lessons of COVID.”26 In fact, many police agencies did just that in response to COVID-19 by establishing “medical liaisons,” often licensed doctors or nurses, to improve coordination with other medical professionals and draw on expertise from regional fusion centers to stay abreast of COVID-19.27

The flexibility shown by law enforcement in adapting to COVID-19 may be a key factor in getting to the future, because in the end, cultural change is something that should come from law enforcement, not happen to it: Further change tends to be more effective when it’s led by the police themselves, rather than being imposed from outside and quickly cast aside once the crisis passes.

Getting to the future

Last year was challenging for law enforcement—but the key is using that challenge as a tool to improve. Some of the best organizations have used high-profile failures to remake themselves. For example, in the wake of high-profile mission failures in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the US military embarked upon a journey to change its core operating model to one very similar to the networked model suggested here for police. In the military’s journey from the landmark Goldwater-Nichols legislation calling for reform to the truly networked force that took the battlefield in the first Gulf War, three key lessons for law enforcement emerge (figure 3): creating uniform standards; tailoring those standards to local circumstances; and driving culture change at every level.28

Create national vision and standards

The first step in almost any significant transformation is to align on a common vision. For policing, this can mean promulgating the idea of a community-defined, networked model of policing to help gain buy-in and grassroots support for the new model. It could also mean creating national programs that support the adoption of the new models of policing. For example, a national program for educational benefits could allow officers at even small departments to continue their training and education after the academy. National programs could also help even out disparities in police funding and enable smaller departments or those in poorer areas without a significant tax base to still maintain the highest standards of policing.29 Similarly, national efforts could work to set standards on common areas that would apply across many different types of departments. Bipartisan recommendations have singled out the need for national accreditation bodies or the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division to help set national standards for policing.

Individual and leadership training could be two areas where national standards could provide real benefit both to departments and communities. At the individual level, standards could help police focus limited training resources where they are needed most. On average, police spend roughly 15% of their academy training time on firearms and self-defense training.30 Although these are undoubtedly important skills, there is less consistency in training for other necessary skills, such as cognizance of bias or interpersonal skills that may not be in academy curriculum at all. Standardizing certain training expectations or requirements can help recruits get educated on soft skills in addition to hard skills such as marksmanship and defensive driving. Of course, officer training and education should be an ongoing, career-long activity and not something that stops after academy graduation. National standards might also include accrediting instructors by a third party rather than the instructor’s own agency, or creating mobile training teams to bring needed skills to departments. These can help smaller, less-funded departments get access to training on new tools and techniques such as the use of data analytics in investigations.

At a leadership level, national standards on continuing education and leadership training can help create upward mobility for top performers. Bridging the gap between managing a small team and leading a whole organization can challenge even the best leaders. Providing that type of training and professionalization was at the core of the creation of the FBI National Academy in 1935.31 The reputation and legacy of the National Academy, paired with opportunities for continuous learning when at home, could play a significant role in developing the next generation of law enforcement leaders.32

Apply that national vision locally

As communities differ in needs and expectations of law enforcement, so should some aspects of law enforcement. Therefore, national standards should provide clear expectations and tools for law enforcement, but through customizable approaches based on the expectations and needs of their community.

Applying national standards locally should start with assessing the current state of relations between law enforcement and the community.33 Standards can set the goal, while new data collection on performance, utilization, and citizen engagement can highlight where gaps to achieving that goal remain, especially hidden gaps such as bias in data collection or enforcement. Then law enforcement can engage the community to understand the best route to achieve those goals—whether through information-sharing, consultation, or even involvement in small- or large-scale decision-making.34

Finding the balance between national expectations and local needs can be challenging, but premade toolkits can help eliminate some of the guesswork. The national programs discussed earlier can develop shared templates for community boards, law enforcement metrics, outreach best practices, and transparency tools as “department-ready” resources that can be customized to department needs. All of these could be adjusted over time as a community’s needs shift.

Implementing changes with integrated culture transformation

Organizational change of any sort requires a culture accepting of change. However, it can be hard for an organization to make an honest and objective appraisal of how open its culture would be to change. Two areas of focus can help departments understand where they are and where they need to be with respect to culture:

  1. Use the data. If part of culture is an organization’s actions, gathering data about how a department does its work can help create objectivity in assessing culture. If a department believes itself to be citizen-focused, but satisfaction survey results don’t back it up, there is likely some work to be done on culture. Data can also give leaders powerful tools to help better lead the organization. For example, the Chicago Police Department rolled out a custom-built system that leverages data to monitor officer behavior and suggest progressive interventions before trouble arises.35 Today, those tools can not only spot problematic conduct but also identify officers who do the right thing in difficult situations, making their stories important as role models in the organization. Advances in data and behavioral science also mean that tools that were once costly custom-built affairs may now be available off the shelf to departments of all sizes.
  2. Get an external perspective. Culture audits done by external specialists can also play an important role in helping law enforcement leaders understand if their department’s culture is aligned with its policies and beliefs.36 Law enforcement organizations are built on positive cultural tenets and artifacts, but the way an organization acts out those central cultural qualities can shift over time, possibly requiring adjustments to bring the organization back to its cultural center. For example, law enforcement culture is built around serving and protecting, and while that central tenet hasn’t changed, a deeper look at culture can shed light on whether the organization is living up to its stated tenets. An external perspective can be critical here to help point to collective blind spots in areas such as diversity and inclusion. Cultural audits could even be included in certification standards, much as companies must conduct financial audits to be traded on a stock market.

The year 2020 has been difficult for law enforcement, and the path to the future may seem equally difficult. As Myers observed, it can almost feel like the old joke on “the two things cops hate most: the way things are, and change” has come true.37 But police have time and again shown a commitment to doing hard things for the good of their communities, and with that commitment, change will undoubtedly bring more effective, more equitable law enforcement in 2021 and beyond.

  1. Current models of policing often require law enforcement officers to handle a wide range of responsibilities from social work to health care, yet they aren’t always given the resources or training to meeting growing responsibilities. For more on this, see US Department of Justice, President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice final report, December 2020, pp. 35–36. View in Article
  2. Heidi Green and John O’Leary, How Biden’s policy plans could impact state and local governments: Federal changes likely to affect state and local operations, Deloitte Insights, November 17, 2020. View in Article
  3. Mike Gelles, Alex Mirkow, and Joe Mariani, The future of law enforcement: Policing strategies to meet the challenges of evolving technology and a changing world, Deloitte Insights, October 22, 2019.  View in Article
  4. Joe Mariani, “Leading to chaos: A conversation with General Stanley McChrystal,” Deloitte Review 19, July 25, 2016. View in Article
  5. John Hagel III et al., Joint Special Operations Task Force: Adopting new approaches to fight an unconventional enemy, Deloitte Insights, March 7, 2018. View in Article
  6. John Hagel III et al., Southwest Airlines Field Techs: Fixing the problems no one else can to keep an airline flying high, Deloitte Insights, March 7, 2018View in Article
  7. Police Executive Research Forum, The police response to active shooter incidents, March 2014. View in Article
  8. Interview with the authors, October 22, 2020.View in Article
  9. Nathan Sloan and Karen Pastakia, Performance management: Playing a winning hand: 2017 Global Human Capital Trends, Deloitte University Press, February 28, 2017. View in Article
  10. Samuel Hardiman, “Memphis hires firm to study how police officers use their time,” Commercial Appeal, December 15, 2020.  View in Article
  11. Interview with the authors, October 9, 2020.View in Article
  12. Sean McCandless, “Improving community relations: How police strategies to improve accountability for social equity affect citizen perceptions,” Public Integrity 20, no. 4 (2018): pp. 370–385.   View in Article
  13. Interview with the authors, October 9, 2020.View in Article
  14. Hypothetical example inspired by integration of CAD and 311 by Baltimore’s problem-oriented policing initiative: Danny Murphy, “From crisis to community policing,” Police Chief, accessed March 8, 2021.  View in Article
  15. Kimberly C. Burke, “Democratic policing and officer well-being,” Frontiers in Psychology 11, no. 874 (2020). View in Article
  16. Nicholas M. Perez, Trinh Nguyen, and Brenda Vogel, “Community police academies: Assessing the effect of education on public perceptions of police,” The Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles (2020). View in Article
  17. Michael J. D. Vermeer, Dulani Woods, Brian A. Jackson, “Would law enforcement leaders support defunding the police?,” RAND Corporation, accessed March 8, 2021. View in Article
  18. Burke, “Democratic policing and officer well-being.”View in Article
  19. Ibid. View in Article
  20. Researchers examined more than 8,600 Chicago police officers named in multiple complaints between 2005 and 2017. The analysis found that the more officers with histories of excessive force were in a group, the higher the risk that other officers in that group would develop similar track records. Source: Marie Ouellet et al., “Network exposure and excessive use of force: Investigating the social transmission of police misconduct,” Criminology & Public Policy 18, no. 3 (2019): pp. 675–704.   View in Article
  21. Similarly, a study focusing on other cities found that as officers with records of misconduct transitioned between working groups within the police force, they consistently increased the likelihood that those around them would be accused of bad behavior. For every 10% increase in the proportion of a police officer’s peers with a history of misconduct, that officer’s chances of engaging in misdeeds in the next three months rose by nearly 8%. Source: Edika Quispe-Torreblanca and Neil Stewart, “Causal peer effects in police misconduct,Nature Human Behaviour 3, (2019): pp. 797–807.View in Article
  22. NOVA, “Making air travel safer,” Public Broadcasting Service, accessed March 8, 2021. View in Article
  23. Severin Borenstein, “The evolution of U.S. airline competition,” Journal of Economic Perspectives 6, no. 2 (1992): pp. 45–73. View in Article
  24. Interview with the authors, October 29, 2020.View in Article
  25. Interview with the authors, October 21, 2020.View in Article
  26. Interview with the authors, November 9, 2020.View in Article
  27. Council on Criminal Justice, Experience to action: Reshaping criminal justice after COVID-19, December 2020.View in Article
  28. For more on the interplay between culture, standards, and customization, see testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee on “30 years of Goldwater-Nichols Reform.” View in Article
  29. Stephen Rushin and Roger Michalski, “Police funding,” HeinOnline, 2020. View in Article
  30. There are no set standards for how law enforcement agencies must train their recruits. The laws that govern police training and other related standards also differ among states or federal agencies. See: Community Relations Services Toolkit for Policing, “Policing 101,” U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) Community Relations Service, accessed March 8, 2021, pp. 3–4.View in Article
  31. Federal Bureau of Investigation, “National Academy,” accessed March 8, 2021. View in Article
  32. Thomas J. Cowper, “The myth of the ‘military model’ of leadership in law enforcement,” Police Quarterly 3, no. 3 (2000): pp. 228–246.View in Article
  33. State of the State, Article 3: Civic engagement: Harnessing voices to expand choices, Deloitte, 2019.View in Article
  34. Ibid. View in Article
  35. Fran Spielman, “CPD launches early intervention system four years in the making,” Chicago Sun-Times, September 1, 2020. View in Article
  36. John Taft et al., SOF culture is the mission: Culture is key to special operations’ transition to great power competition, Deloitte Insights, July 15, 2020. View in Article
  37. Interview with the authors, October 9, 2020.View in Article

The authors owe a special thanks to Rick Myers, Tom Cowper, Dr. Bernard Levin, Dr. Andreas Olligschlaeger, and Dr. Michael Buerger for sharing their time and insight as interviewees for this article. The authors would also like to thank Maura Welch and Tori Cooney of Deloitte Consulting LLP for their invaluable guidance in bringing this paper together. 

Cover artwork: Sonya Vasilieff.

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