Uniting departments and communities around programs that uplift and heal them.

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Today, bring racial healing to your community and here's how.

The National Day of Racial Healing is an annual day dedicated to #HowWeHeal from the effects of racism. Launched on Jan. 17, 2017, it is an opportunity to bring ALL people together in their common humanity and take collective action to create a more just and equitable world.

From coast to coast, communities honor the National Day of Racial Healing in unique and meaningful ways. This annual day, co-hosted by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation (WKKF) and Truth, Racial Healing & Transformation (TRHT) community partners, is held the Tuesday following Martin Luther King, Jr Day each year. In the weeks leading up to the day, WKKF and TRHT organizations will share resources to help communities create local activities and events for the National Day of Healing.

We invite you to join us not only for this day of celebration, but every day to share #HowWeHeal. The National Day of Racial Healing Facebook page is used for community discussions and to share ideas, knowledge and points of view related to truth, racial healing, transformation and racial equity. We value your interest and respectful dialogue. We reserve the right to remove posts that are offensive, act as advertisements or attempt to solicit funds.

To learn more about the National Day of Racial Healing, click here.

Communities

Solutions-driven Community Policing framework

Police2Peace ® provides departments of all kinds with alternatives to the ways they deliver public safety, while helping communities reimagine how they would like policing to be. One way we do this is by reframing police officer as PEACE OFFICER.  This small but powerful shift provides departments and communities with a framework for innovative, community-led policing approaches.  The impact is better engagement, new channels of communication, building public trust and co-producing public safety.  Police2Peace’s programs and Peace Officer Frameworktm are being used by departments and communities around the country to redefine, reimagine and advance policing in America so that everyone can lead their best possible lives.

Peace Officer Around the World

Australia

Peace Officers established under the Peace Officers Act of 1925

Canada

Peace Officers include mayors, wardens, sheriffs, deputy sheriffs, sheriff's officer and justices of the peace

Hong Kong

Peace Officers established under the Chinese Peace Officers Regulation Ordinance of 1844

United States

Nearly all 50 states cite in their penal codes officers as Peace Officers.

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Sri Lanka

Under the Code Of Criminal Procedure a peace officer includes all police officers

United Kingdom

The first centrally organized police force in the world was created in Ireland, then a part of the United Kingdom, following the Peace Preservation Act in 1814

United Nations

UN Peacekeepers of the United Nations are governed by the Department of Peace Operations

Around the world the term “Peace Officer” is often used.  While in the US the term can vary from state to state, it usually means a law enforcement role which includes a badge, has the power to arrest, and also carries a service weapon. For example, police officers, deputy sheriffs, state troopers, and special agents all have similar positions as peace officers.  In the US, the term “sworn” may also be used which means an individual who has been sworn in as a peace officer. While federal law enforcement officers operate under the authority of federal law, many of these federal officers are also recognized as peace officers under various state laws which provide them with the authority to enforce state and local laws. 

A New Community Policing Framework

PEACE OFFICER is an innovation for community-led policing.  Historically, community policing in the U.S. can be traced back as far as the nineteenth century. The broad role for police was articulated by Sir Robert Peel in the 1820’s with the creation of the first modern police force.  Research released in the late 1970s began a new wave of adoption in the U.S., and community-oriented policing has since been implemented around the country.  The common thread through the decades has been that police are most effective when they exist in the community not as law enforcement, but as part of the community–solving problems and creating a safer civic environment.   Police2Peace is making this vision a reality by re-framing policing as PEACE OFFICER. Our vision is national coherence around policing rooted in community engagement, transparency,  accountability and reducing use of force.  It is  acting in good faith without malice.  In this way, we are working to change the way America sees and experiences policing right down to the neighborhood level, every day. 

Watch the 2021 National Sheriff of the Year Leon Lott speak about our Peace Officer programs.

17,985

Total Departments

Total U.S. Municipal Law Enforcement Departments

According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics

14,819

Total Police

Local Police Departments

Comprised of local city police departments

3,166

Total Sheriff's

County Sheriff's Offices

Comprised of local county sheriff's offices

Get Involved

Send us a message or give us a call.  We will respond within 24 hours with the tools you need to get started.

Police2Peace is a national, nonpartisan, nonprofit corporation formed to redefine, reimagine and advance policing on a national scale through the framework of police officers as “Peace Officers”. All donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent of the law.

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Police2Peace is a registered mark of Police2Peace.  Peace Officer Project,  Peace Officer Promise, Peace Officer Framework  and Peace Officer:  Realizing the True Purpose of Policing are trademarks of Police2Peace.