Week 5 Discussion
Predictable Surprise
Whatever prompted Al Hoffman, Bob Merrill, and Clem Watts (1950) to write the wry lyrics to “If I Knew You Were Comin’ I’d’ve Baked a Cake,” the message is clear: Let me know your plans so I can be prepared. In Irons (2005), the same concept applies: If you knew what was coming, you could have been prepared. Lacking some way to foretell the future, how do you prepare for such an immense catastrophe as Hurricane Katrina?
For this Discussion, review the article by Irons from this week’s resources.
Post by Day 3 your understanding of the relevance and utility of the concept of predictable surprise. How does predictable surprise relate to the criminal justice system? Describe a predictable surprise event other than Hurricane Katrina, and explain its ramifications for the criminal justice system. Finally, explain how a criminal justice organization skilled at forecasting and identifying issues might have prevented this event or greatly reduced its effects.
Week 5 Learning Resources
This page contains the Learning Resources for this week. Be sure to scroll down the page to see all of this week’s assigned Learning Resources.
Required Resources
Readings
- Haberfeld, M. R. (2013). Police leadership: Organizational and managerial decision making process (2nd ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson Education, Inc.
- Chapter 7, “When the Event is Just Too Much to Handle: Situational Leadership Theory” (pp. 81–96)
- Bueermann, J. (2012a). Being smart on crime with evidence-based policing. NIJ Journal, (269), 12–15. Retrieved from http://www.nij.gov/journals/269/Pages/evidence.aspx
- Irons, L. (2005). Hurricane Katrina as a predictable surprise. Homeland Security Affairs, 1(2), 1–21. Retrieved from http://www.hsaj.org/?fullarticle=1.2.7
- Etue, K. K. (2012). No-boundaries policing. In D. R. C. McCullough & D. L. Spence (Eds.), American policing in 2022: Essays on the future of a profession (pp. 49–52). Retrieved from http://www.calea.org/sites/default/files/Policing%202022-p235-pub.pdf