Calling upon and assisting police officers are acts that link informal and formal mechanisms of social control. In this paper, we draw upon data from a survey of seven London electoral wards to investigate some of the factors predicting public willingness to assist police. We find that such cooperation is associated, first, with high levels of public trust in police; second, with confidence that local residents will intervene on behalf of the collective good; and third, with heightened concerns about disorder and the loss of authority and discipline in society. We conclude with the idea that cooperation may be influenced not only by peoples’ relationships with police, but also by their (real and imagined) relationships with each other. Nota...
Research finds police-led crime control interventions focusing on places and involving partnerships ...
The role of police in building collective efficacy remains an unanswered question. This paper employ...
Tyler’s process-based model of regulation suggests that when citizens perceive the police as a legit...
Calling upon and assisting police officers are acts that link informal and formal mechanisms of soci...
Calling upon and assisting police officers are acts that link informal and formal mechanisms of soci...
Public confidence in policing is receiving increasing attention from UK social scientists and policy...
Objectives: Test whether cooperation with the police can be modelled as a place-based norm that vari...
This paper examines the relationship between public confidence in policing and public perceptions of...
Urban area neighborhoods are no stranger to the vastly changing economic and social structures that ...
One of the first actions of the new Home Secretary was to scrap public confidence as the single perf...
Policing by consent has long been viewed as a fundamental feature of modern policing. Police need ci...
This paper explores how to increase public cooperation and support for police. To date, only a few s...
Areas high in collective efficacy – where residents know and trust one another and are willing to in...
Social identity is a core aspect of procedural justice theory, which predicts that fair treatment at...
Objectives: Test whether cooperation with the police can be modelled as a place-based norm that vari...
Research finds police-led crime control interventions focusing on places and involving partnerships ...
The role of police in building collective efficacy remains an unanswered question. This paper employ...
Tyler’s process-based model of regulation suggests that when citizens perceive the police as a legit...
Calling upon and assisting police officers are acts that link informal and formal mechanisms of soci...
Calling upon and assisting police officers are acts that link informal and formal mechanisms of soci...
Public confidence in policing is receiving increasing attention from UK social scientists and policy...
Objectives: Test whether cooperation with the police can be modelled as a place-based norm that vari...
This paper examines the relationship between public confidence in policing and public perceptions of...
Urban area neighborhoods are no stranger to the vastly changing economic and social structures that ...
One of the first actions of the new Home Secretary was to scrap public confidence as the single perf...
Policing by consent has long been viewed as a fundamental feature of modern policing. Police need ci...
This paper explores how to increase public cooperation and support for police. To date, only a few s...
Areas high in collective efficacy – where residents know and trust one another and are willing to in...
Social identity is a core aspect of procedural justice theory, which predicts that fair treatment at...
Objectives: Test whether cooperation with the police can be modelled as a place-based norm that vari...
Research finds police-led crime control interventions focusing on places and involving partnerships ...
The role of police in building collective efficacy remains an unanswered question. This paper employ...
Tyler’s process-based model of regulation suggests that when citizens perceive the police as a legit...