Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine how police authority – in its “soft” form – is used and understood by staff and detainees in police custody in England, examining how these meanings are shaped by this unique police setting. It is argued that the nature of this setting, as fraught and uncertain, along with the large volume of citizens who come into contact with the police therein, makes police custody the ultimate “teachable moment”. Design/methodology/approach – The present paper is based on in-depth qualitative data collected between March 2014 and May 2015 in four custody suites (in four forces). In each site, the researchers spent three to four weeks observing and then interviewed 10-15 staff (largely police offic...
This is the first of the country-specific European Social Survey topline results reports. Focusing o...
In 2016 and 2017, survey data were collected from 473 staff and 371 detainees in 27 custody suites i...
In a series of recent influential papers, Anthony Bottoms and Justice Tankebe make the case for a ‘d...
For the most part, the procedural justice model has been found to generalise across different social...
Since the 1980s, police custody in England and Wales has seen the civilianisation and privatisation ...
This paper explores how individuals managed by a specialist policing unit, referred to as ‘integrate...
Procedural justice theory predicts a relationship between police behaviour, individuals’ normative e...
Abstract Purpose: This paper examines the extent to which police legitimacy and social identity expl...
This thesis investigates the work of custody visiting in police stations. Custody visitors make what...
As a unique criminal justice organisation, the police present challenges, but also opportunities for...
Since the 1980s, police custody in England and Wales has seen the civilianisation and privatisation ...
In England & Wales, the number of people leaving prison subject to a period of supervision in the co...
British police custody is one of the most challenging of police environments, with the treatment of ...
This paper contributes to the literature on Procedural Justice Theory (PJT) by exploring its capacit...
The Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE) 1984 was implemented in 1986 to, inter alia, routinise...
This is the first of the country-specific European Social Survey topline results reports. Focusing o...
In 2016 and 2017, survey data were collected from 473 staff and 371 detainees in 27 custody suites i...
In a series of recent influential papers, Anthony Bottoms and Justice Tankebe make the case for a ‘d...
For the most part, the procedural justice model has been found to generalise across different social...
Since the 1980s, police custody in England and Wales has seen the civilianisation and privatisation ...
This paper explores how individuals managed by a specialist policing unit, referred to as ‘integrate...
Procedural justice theory predicts a relationship between police behaviour, individuals’ normative e...
Abstract Purpose: This paper examines the extent to which police legitimacy and social identity expl...
This thesis investigates the work of custody visiting in police stations. Custody visitors make what...
As a unique criminal justice organisation, the police present challenges, but also opportunities for...
Since the 1980s, police custody in England and Wales has seen the civilianisation and privatisation ...
In England & Wales, the number of people leaving prison subject to a period of supervision in the co...
British police custody is one of the most challenging of police environments, with the treatment of ...
This paper contributes to the literature on Procedural Justice Theory (PJT) by exploring its capacit...
The Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE) 1984 was implemented in 1986 to, inter alia, routinise...
This is the first of the country-specific European Social Survey topline results reports. Focusing o...
In 2016 and 2017, survey data were collected from 473 staff and 371 detainees in 27 custody suites i...
In a series of recent influential papers, Anthony Bottoms and Justice Tankebe make the case for a ‘d...