High-profile events involving police use of force in various cities throughout the US and internationally have garnered enormous media coverage and demonstrated the importance of police-community relations. To date little empirical attention has focused on how such events may negatively impact police officers. Using survey data from 567 officers, this study considers whether perceptions of negative publicity are adversely related to officers’ sense of self-legitimacy (i.e. the confidence they have in their authority). Findings revealed officers who felt less motivated as a result of negative publicity expressed less self-legitimacy. However, the degree to which officers felt their job had become more dangerous as a result of negative public...
This study seeks to examine how student officers (recruits) develop self-legitimacy. Self-legitimacy...
Tyler’s process-based model of regulation suggests that when citizens perceive the police as a legit...
During the latter half of the 20th century American policing became more professional (Skogan & Fryd...
Three years since the murder of George Floyd and police departments, nationwide, are amid a staffing...
Objectives: Democratic policing involves an ongoing dialogue between officers and citizens about wha...
Recently, United States law enforcement officers have faced heavy criticism from both the public and...
Legitimacy is at the heart of the functioning of criminal justice systems. In their paper Beyond Pro...
Today, as in past decades, law enforcement agencies across the nation have faced a common problem, l...
The primary purpose of this thesis was to determine whether self-legitimacy impacted police officer ...
Abstract Purpose: This paper examines the extent to which police legitimacy and social identity expl...
The current climate surrounding the police in the United States could be described as strenuous. Thi...
Legitimacy acts as the dividing line between a police force that merely possesses legal authority to...
Legitimacy acts as the dividing line between a police force that merely possesses legal authority to...
Procedural justice and police legitimacy research suggests that perceptions of legitimacy are based ...
The process-based model dominates contemporary American research on police-community relations and p...
This study seeks to examine how student officers (recruits) develop self-legitimacy. Self-legitimacy...
Tyler’s process-based model of regulation suggests that when citizens perceive the police as a legit...
During the latter half of the 20th century American policing became more professional (Skogan & Fryd...
Three years since the murder of George Floyd and police departments, nationwide, are amid a staffing...
Objectives: Democratic policing involves an ongoing dialogue between officers and citizens about wha...
Recently, United States law enforcement officers have faced heavy criticism from both the public and...
Legitimacy is at the heart of the functioning of criminal justice systems. In their paper Beyond Pro...
Today, as in past decades, law enforcement agencies across the nation have faced a common problem, l...
The primary purpose of this thesis was to determine whether self-legitimacy impacted police officer ...
Abstract Purpose: This paper examines the extent to which police legitimacy and social identity expl...
The current climate surrounding the police in the United States could be described as strenuous. Thi...
Legitimacy acts as the dividing line between a police force that merely possesses legal authority to...
Legitimacy acts as the dividing line between a police force that merely possesses legal authority to...
Procedural justice and police legitimacy research suggests that perceptions of legitimacy are based ...
The process-based model dominates contemporary American research on police-community relations and p...
This study seeks to examine how student officers (recruits) develop self-legitimacy. Self-legitimacy...
Tyler’s process-based model of regulation suggests that when citizens perceive the police as a legit...
During the latter half of the 20th century American policing became more professional (Skogan & Fryd...