Indigenous Community Liaison Officer
Indigenous community liaison officers liaise with Indigenous communities and the state or territory police forces in order to establish and maintain positive relationships.
Indigenous community liaison officers may perform the following tasks:
- establish good communication between police and local Indigenous communities
- help work out disputes involving police and Indigenous communities
- advise and educate police officers on cross-cultural awareness
- advise police on potential crime and disorder areas and suggest ways to stop it happening
- improve community knowledge about policing services and law and order issues
- provide assistance to relatives visiting Indigenous prisoners
- go to interviews that involve Indigenous juveniles
- use appropriate police powers and prepare prosecution briefs.
Indigenous community liaison officers usually have limited police powers, although in certain circumstances they may assist police officers with law enforcement tasks such as arrest, search and detainment. However, in Tasmania and WA there is no separate Indigenous community liaison officer program. Instead, fully sworn members of the police force, who have specialised in the liaison role, perform this function.
Indigenous community liaison officers are required to work shifts, including weekends and public holidays, and may serve in urban and remote communities.
Personal Requirements:
- enjoy working with people
- good communication and negotiation skills
- of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent
- of sound character
- acceptable traffic/criminal record
- medically fit.
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