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Nightclub Managers and the Regulation of Crowd Controllers
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Nightclub Managers and the Regulation of Crowd Controllers

Timothy Prenzler and Hennessey Hayes
Security Journal, Vol.10(2), pp.103-110
1998
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Abstract

Criminology crowd control private police crime prevention measures police crime-prevention alcoholic beverage consumption foreign police crime in foreign countries foreign laws Australia
In 1993, Queensland, Australia, introduced new legislation to regulate the security industry. The Security Providers Act was based on the Private Agents Act of 1990 developed in Victoria. Both acts aimed to improve the conduct and competence of security providers through tougher licensing requirements, including criminal history checks and mandated training. To assess the views of nightclub managers, a mail questionnaire was developed and sent to 64 respondents. Only 21 completed questionnaires were returned, and the small number of questionnaires did not permit statistical analysis. Nonetheless, results showed a positive view of the impact of the legislation in reducing violence by crowd controllers against patrols. Strong support was indicated for greater restrictions on access to licenses and on improved compliance monitoring. There was moderate support for the very limited training regime, and this finding may have been symptomatic of the need for greater cognizance of management responsibility for a fully professional approach to patron protection. Suggestions are offered for educating nightclub managers about the complex causes of violence in licensed premises and the need for higher standards for security staff. An appendix contains the list of questions asked of survey respondents. 7 references and 4 tables

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