Public Safety, Law Enforcement & Security
Public safety, law enforcement, and security is a large domain by design — combining municipal police, sheriff and state police, prosecutors and public defenders, courts, jails and prisons, parole and probation, and the federal national-security apparatus. The combination is intentional because separating them obscures how they function as a system. The PA-3 analysis will need to handle Philadelphia (its own police department, its own DA, its own jail system) separately from the surrounding municipalities and from the federal layer.
Six ways into this domain
Meet the neighborsProfiles from PA-3 · start here if you're new
Profiles of PA-3 residents whose lived experience illustrates the structural findings in this domain. Names and neighborhoods at the resident's discretion.
Start with a story →
Verify & contributeTest claims · correct · draft
Every finding here can be checked. Walk through sources, propose a correction, draft sub-domain analysis, or submit policy language.
Get involved →
What changed recently
Recent changes affecting this domain — external events (legislation, court decisions, rate updates) and internal contributions, with dates.
See the timeline →
The gaps
Where formal architecture and operational reality diverge in PA-3 — under-resourcing, discretionary implementation, statutory ambiguity, capture.
Read the findings →
Sub-domains
Specific instruments within this domain — particular taxes, programs, agencies, statutes — analyzed in depth.
Browse sub-domains →
The law itself
The legal chain behind this domain — federal, state, and local — with plain-language framing and direct links to authoritative texts.
Open the appendix →
This domain is planned. The cards above describe what each entry path will contain once the analysis is written. The structure exists; the content will follow.