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How people judge policing / P.A.J. Waddington [and three others].

By: Waddington, P. A. J [author.].Publisher: Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2017Description: x, 196 pages.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780198718888.Subject(s): Police -- Great Britain -- Public opinion | Police-community relations -- Great Britain -- Public opinionDDC classification: 363.20941
Contents:
1: The Public and the Police. 2: Studying Public Attitudes to Police Behaviour. 3: Consensus and Contention in Public Attitudes. 4: Acting on Suspicion. 5: Force. 6: The Culture of the Public and the Police. 7: Professional Policing. 8: Summary and Conclusion
Summary: When people witness occasions when police use their powers to investigate crime and arrest offenders, how do those members of the public assess what they have seen? This book reports research in which a variety of groups from the West Midlands watched short video-clips of such real-life incidents and then discussed their appraisal amongst themselves. What emerges from those discussions is that the practice of policing is deeply controversial. On most issues, group members were divided and strongly, often passionately arguing their case. There was no 'blank cheque' for the police, neither was there unremitting criticism, even though some of groups comprised young offenders or the homeless. People worried about whether or not the police on the video-clips had justification for their suspicions; how they managed situations to prevent them getting out of hand; and whether any use of force was justified. Allowing the reader to 'hear the voices' of dissension that were analysed, the authors present implications which are profound for the police and for all those who are policed - suspects, victims, bystanders, and the public at large - as well as practical proposals for police officers and police governance.
Holdings
Item type Current library Class number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey 363.20941 WAD (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 014138

1: The Public and the Police. 2: Studying Public Attitudes to Police Behaviour. 3: Consensus and Contention in Public Attitudes. 4: Acting on Suspicion. 5: Force. 6: The Culture of the Public and the Police. 7: Professional Policing. 8: Summary and Conclusion

When people witness occasions when police use their powers to investigate crime and arrest offenders, how do those members of the public assess what they have seen? This book reports research in which a variety of groups from the West Midlands watched short video-clips of such real-life incidents and then discussed their appraisal amongst themselves. What emerges from those discussions is that the practice of policing is deeply controversial. On most issues, group members were divided and strongly, often passionately arguing their case. There was no 'blank cheque' for the police, neither was there unremitting criticism, even though some of groups comprised young offenders or the homeless. People worried about whether or not the police on the video-clips had justification for their suspicions; how they managed situations to prevent them getting out of hand; and whether any use of force was justified. Allowing the reader to 'hear the voices' of dissension that were analysed, the authors present implications which are profound for the police and for all those who are policed - suspects, victims, bystanders, and the public at large - as well as practical proposals for police officers and police governance.

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