POLICING STRATEGIES IN LARGE FREE-ACCESS EVENTS: AN ANALYSIS OF THE APPLICATION OF DNAISP AND THE TACTICAL PLANNING OF PMPR IN "VERÃO MAIOR PARANÁ 2026"
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v12i2.24296Keywords:
Public Security. DNAISP. Crowd Management. PMPR. Applied Technology.Abstract
This article analyzes the application of the National Doctrine of Integrated Public Security Action (DNAISP) in mass events, using as a case study the security operation for Alok's concert on the coast of Paraná in 2026. The event, with a record audience of 338,000 people in a geographically sensitive area, served as a laboratory for the definitive transition from the "civil disturbance control" paradigm to "crowd management". The methodology consists of a documentary and case analysis based on the Integrated Action Process (PAI) and the use of the Integrated Coordination, Communication, Command, and Control System (SIC4), grounded in the operational, tactical, and technological directives of the Paraná Military Police (PMPR). Results demonstrate that the integration between specialized units (Shock, RONE, ROCAM, and BPTran), tourist-oriented policing, and the intensive use of technologies — such as private LTE networks, thermal drones, and the Falcão Project — allowed for the maintenance of public order without major incidents. It is concluded that institutional maturity, combined with technological interoperability and prior planning, is crucial for operational resilience in high-complexity scenarios.
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Atribuição CC BY