Chapter 1: Training and Education for Police Conflict Management.- Chapter 2: Criteria for High Quality Training of Police Officers.- Chapter 3: Empowering police trainers: Introducing the costraints-led approach for the design of effective learning environments in police training.- Chapter 4: Coaching Police Conflict Management.- Chapter 5: Sport Psychology Applied to Tactical Training of Law Enforcement Officers.- Chapter 6: Moral Injury as a Challenge in a Value-driven Profession- Insights from Ethics for the Education and Training of Police Agents.- Chapter 7: Martial arts myths in police use-of-force training.- Chapter 8: Police checks and arrests escalating into conflict: Coping principles and strategies taught in Swiss police academics drawn from research in social psychology.- Chapter 9: How officers perform and grow under stress: Police training in virtual reality.- Chapter 10: Trialogic interventions: An innovative anti-stigma module for de-escalation trainings.- Chapter 11: An Evidence-Informed Approach to De-escalation Training.- Chapter 12: De-escalation Fundamentals.- Chapter 13: Police Hostage and Crisis Negotiation Training: Foci, Protocols and Best Practice Principles.- Chapter 14: Tactical Gaze Control and Visual Attention in Law Enforcement.- Chapter 15: Professional Shooting Tests in South Africa: A Qualitative-Descriptive Study and Critique.- Chapter 16: Police Training and Police Violence in Scandinavia.- Chapter 17: Leadership as a mental shield: How leaders of specialised police units promote inner resilience and mental stability.
Mario S. Staller is a professor at the University of Applied Sciences for Police and Public Administration North-Rhine Westphalia in Aachen, Germany.
Swen Koerner is a professor at the German Sport University and Head of the Department of Training Pedagogy and Martial Research.
Benni Zaiser, PhD, is an officer with one of Canada’s largest police services and an independent behavioural scientist with an interest in the intersection between cognitive and social psychology during encounters between the public and the police.