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Este estudo teórico-reflexivo analisa a evolução, o estado atual e os desafios futuros dos spotters da Polícia de Segurança Pública no policiamento de eventos desportivos em
Portugal. Combina revisão de literatura e análise documental com reflexão profissional como recurso hermenêutico. A análise é orientada por um conjunto de hipóteses que avança com a argumentação que a integração operacional dos spotters nos policiamentos desportivos aumenta a capacidade de melhoria das avaliações de risco; reforça perceções de legitimidade e auto-moderação de comportamentos; formação dos spotters permite aumentar a vertente mediadora de conflitos; o uso de mecanismos formais de aprendizagem continua aumentam a eficácia das operações policiais. Os resultados indicam que o modelo nacional de spotting – de equipas interventivas, visíveis e dialogantes – potencia a avaliação dinâmica do risco, mediação precoce e auxilia a tomada de decisão. Porém, persistem assimetrias territoriais e formativas, zonas cinzentas entre mediação e recolha probatória. Neste contexto, o estudo propõe a revisão dos normativos nacionais no sentido de se atualizarem à luz das melhores práticas internacionais e de adotar o espírito da Convenção de Saint-Denis.
This theoretical–reflective study examines the evolution, current state, and future challenges of Public Security Police spotters in the policing of sports events in Portugal. It combines literature review and documentary analysis with professional reflection as a hermeneutic resource. The analysis is guided by hypotheses arguing that the operational integration of spotters into sports policing enhances the quality of risk assessments; strengthens perceptions of legitimacy and the self-moderation of behaviors; that their training increases their conflict-mediation capacity; and that formal mechanisms of continuous learning improve the effectiveness of police operations. The findings indicate that Portugal’s spotting model – interventive, visible, and dialogue-oriented teams – boosts dynamic risk assessment, enables early mediation, and supports decision-making. However, territorial and training asymmetries persist, as do grey areas between mediation and evidential gathering. In this context, the study proposes revising national regulations to align them with international best practices and to adopt the spirit of the Saint-Denis Convention.
This theoretical–reflective study examines the evolution, current state, and future challenges of Public Security Police spotters in the policing of sports events in Portugal. It combines literature review and documentary analysis with professional reflection as a hermeneutic resource. The analysis is guided by hypotheses arguing that the operational integration of spotters into sports policing enhances the quality of risk assessments; strengthens perceptions of legitimacy and the self-moderation of behaviors; that their training increases their conflict-mediation capacity; and that formal mechanisms of continuous learning improve the effectiveness of police operations. The findings indicate that Portugal’s spotting model – interventive, visible, and dialogue-oriented teams – boosts dynamic risk assessment, enables early mediation, and supports decision-making. However, territorial and training asymmetries persist, as do grey areas between mediation and evidential gathering. In this context, the study proposes revising national regulations to align them with international best practices and to adopt the spirit of the Saint-Denis Convention.
Descrição
Trabalho individual do Curso de Comando e Direção Policial.
Palavras-chave
inteligência policial polícia policiamentos desportivos spotting police police intelligence sports policing.
Contexto Educativo
Citação
Editora
Licença CC
Sem licença CC
