Ferreira, Paulo Vinícius dos Santos; 7731523449395220; http://lattes.cnpq.br/7731523449395220
Resumo:
This dissertation aims to identify how academic literature has addressed police reform processes
in Latin America, focusing on the advances, limitations, and contextual factors shaping
institutional transformations across different countries. A systematic literature review was
conducted using the PRISMA 2020 protocol, selecting and analyzing studies that explore
reform initiatives in Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Colombia, and Peru. The research seeks
to systematize the analytical categories, methodological approaches, core concepts, and main
findings reported in the selected works. The analysis reveals that, although several reform
efforts are inspired by democratic principles such as citizen security, accountability, and human
rights, these transformations are frequently constrained by authoritarian legacies, militarized
policing practices, institutional resistance, and fragmented public policies. Curricular reforms
in police academies, the creation of social control mechanisms, and the introduction of
horizontal governance practices appear as significant developments, yet often with limited
practical impact. The studies reviewed show that the success of reform initiatives is highly
conditioned by contextual variables, such as federal arrangements, police autonomy, political
and social pressure, and the role of local bureaucracies. The dissertation concludes that police
reform processes in the region involve complex institutional arrangements, which vary
according to the interaction between historical legacies, political dynamics, and multi-level
governance structures. The consolidation of more democratic security models depends on the
articulation of legal, operational, and cultural changes, driven by context-sensitive strategies
that adapt to local specificities.