As a graduate, you will be prepared to reliably demonstrate the ability to:
- Discuss the ways in which crime and intelligence analysis principles influence tactical and strategic decision making to support public safety.
- Articulate the ways in which information and/or intelligence may be exchanged to encourage coordination across public and private organizations, and law enforcement agencies.
- Select appropriate intelligence collection methods, processing, and dissemination mechanisms to support public safety at strategic, tactical, and operational levels.
- Analyze crime and intelligence data using a variety of tools/methodologies to support law enforcement institutions in their preventive, investigative, and administrative functions.
- Apply criminological theories and analytical techniques to discover and interpret temporal and spatial crime patterns.
- Evaluate appropriate policing models to address complex criminal and/or non-criminal situations.
- Apply current theory and evidence-based research and relevant data to make and support recommendations for crime reduction strategies.
- Design crime reduction tactics to support public safety.
- Create intelligence and crime analysis reports, documents/work products to disseminate data and to inform decision making at operational, tactical, and strategic levels.
- Model ethical and professional standards to comply with relevant industry, legal, and regulatory requirements and expectations.
- Propose evidence-based and data-driven solutions within various organizational frameworks to inform crime and intelligence practices.
- Engage in critical thinking, problem- solving, collaboration, and communication skills to support analytical assessments and interpersonal relationships.
- Integrate principles that honour equity diversity, and inclusion, of all persons such as: Indigenous peoples, racialized Canadians, refugees and newcomers, persons with exceptionalities, 2SLGBTQI+, and other groups listed in the Ontario Human Rights Code