Academic team: Dr Leah Tomkins, Professor Jean Hartley
Policing partners: Metropolitan Police Service
Status: Complete
We are working with leaders, officers and staff at the Metropolitan Police Service in London to change understandings and practices of Organisational learning (OL). This means helping to shape MPS as a culture of learning and innovation – both in front-line policing and in the centralised functions of strategy, leadership and organisational development. All this is taking place against a backdrop of significant change brought about through the particular demands of London as a global city.
Our main focus to date has been in the following areas:
| Title | Outputs type | Lead academic | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Organisational learning and the Metropolitan Police Service: Report from the scoping study | Report | Tomkin, L | 2020 |
| From blame to praise in policing: Implications for leadership and the public conversation | Action research report | Tomkins, L | 2020 |
| From blame to praise in policing: Implications for strategy, culture, process and well-being | Action research report | Tomkins, L | 2020 |
| Asymmetries of leadership: Agency, response and reason | Academic paper | Tomkins, L | 2019 |
| Empowering learning | Board report | Bristow, A | 2019 |
Professor Clifford Stott (Centre for Policing Research and Learning) has published a Landmark Article in the British Journal of Social Psychology, one of the discipline’s leading international journals. The paper examines the historical relationship between social psychology, crowd theory, and the governance of public order.