International police missions as reverse capacity building: experiences of Australian police personnel

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University of Wollongong Research Online Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive) Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts 2009 International police missions as reverse capacity building: experiences of Australian police personnel Vandra Harris Flinders University Andrew Goldsmith University of Wollongong, agoldsmi@uow.edu.au Publication Details A. Goldsmith & V. Harris, 'International police missions as reverse capacity building: experiences of Australian police personnel' (2009) 3 (1) Policing (Oxford): a journal of policy and practice 50-58. Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: research-pubs@uow.edu.au

International police missions as reverse capacity building: experiences of Australian police personnel Abstract Since 2003 many hundreds of Australian police officers have served in police peace-keeping and capacitybuilding missions in Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste and Papua New Guinea. Working within bilateral or multilateral engagements, these police have encountered significant differences in legal and policing cultures as well as political and community environments. This paper considers how these experiences influence Australian police officers' thinking about policing in general, and how they view the legacy of their service. It explores the extent to which Australian police think they have had their own capabilities altered by the very processes through which they attempt to build the capacity of host police forces. We label this process 'reverse capacity building' and argue that there is a major benefit for domestic policing from such engagements. Keywords International, police, missions, reverse, capacity, building, experiences, Australian, police, personnel Disciplines Law Publication Details A. Goldsmith & V. Harris, 'International police missions as reverse capacity building: experiences of Australian police personnel' (2009) 3 (1) Policing (Oxford): a journal of policy and practice 50-58. This journal article is available at Research Online: http://ro.uow.edu.au/lawpapers/203

50 International Police Missions as Reverse Capacity Building: Experiences of Australian Police Personnel 1 Vandra Harris* and Andrew Goldsmith** Abstract Since 2003 many hundreds of Australian police officers have served in police peace-keeping and capacitybuilding missions in Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste and Papua New Guinea. Working within bilateral or multilateral engagements, these police have encountered significant differences in legal and policing cultures as well as political and community environments. This paper considers how these experiences influence Australian police officers' thinking about policing in general, and how they view the legacy of their service. It explores the extent to which Australian police think they have had their own capabilities altered by the very processes through which they attempt to build the capacity of host police forces. We label this process 'reverse capacity building' and argue that there is a major benefit for domestic policing from such engagements. Introduction Since 1964, more than 3,000 Australian police officers have been deployed on overseas missions, primarily with the United Nations and also in missions led by the USA (Haiti 1994-95), Australia and New Zealand (Bougainville 1997-2000; Solomon Islands 2000-02 and 2003-present) and one exclusively Australian mission (Papua New Guinea 2004). This paper focuses on the Australian missions to Timor Leste, Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea since 2003. These missions have been overseen by the Australian Federal Police (AFP), and since late 2004 by the International Deployment Group within the AFP. Australian police roles in these missions have included both in-line (executive) policing and capacity building of local police forces in order to strengthen the host nation. The missions operate under different timelines but are mainly short term, varying in length from a few months to several years. The expectation has been that Australian police, as peacekeepers, will assist in the restoration of law and order, and, as capacity builders, will enable 'Vandra Harris, School of Law, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia. E-mail: Vandra.Harris@flinders.edu.au "Professor Andrew Goldsmith, School of Law, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia. E-mail: Andrew.Goldsmith@flinders. edu.au I This paper forms part of work from the Policing the Neighbourhood project, a Linkage Project supported by the Australian Research Council and the industry partner, the Australian Federal Police (LP0560643). The assistance of these two agencies is much appreciated. The paper has benefited from a presentation workshop held at the International Deployment Group headquarters in Canberra, 4 June 2008. The comments and feedback provided by AFP personnel at that presentation were useful and appreciated. However, the views presented here remain those of the authors. Advance Access publication: 10 February 2009 Policing, Volume 3, Number 1, pp. 50-58 doi: 10.1093/police/pan068 The Authors 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of CSF Associates: Publius, Inc. All rights reserved. For permissions please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org