Police-Citizen Relations Across the World
Comparing sources and contexts of trust and legitimacy
Herausgeber: Oberwittler, Dietrich; Roché, Sebastian
Police-Citizen Relations Across the World
Comparing sources and contexts of trust and legitimacy
Herausgeber: Oberwittler, Dietrich; Roché, Sebastian
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This book considers questions of police legitimacy in different regions of the world, explores the perception of legitimacy and examines how procedural justice is important for building legitimacy.
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This book considers questions of police legitimacy in different regions of the world, explores the perception of legitimacy and examines how procedural justice is important for building legitimacy.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 308
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Februar 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 467g
- ISBN-13: 9780367227692
- ISBN-10: 036722769X
- Artikelnr.: 55707187
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 308
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Februar 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 467g
- ISBN-13: 9780367227692
- ISBN-10: 036722769X
- Artikelnr.: 55707187
Dietrich Oberwittler is a senior researcher at the Max Planck Institute for International and Foreign Criminal Law (Department of Criminology) in Freiburg, Germany, and extracurricular professor of sociology at the University of Freiburg. Sebastian Roché is a Research Professor at the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) at Sciences-Po, University of Grenoble-Alpes, France. First secretary general of the European Society of Criminology after its foundation, he is today the regional editor (Europe) of Policing and Society.
Foreword
Michal Tonry
Part I: Introduction. 1. Towards a broader view of police-citizen relations: How societal cleavages and political contexts shape trust and distrust
legitimacy and illegitimacy
Sebastian Roché and Dietrich Oberwittler
Part II: Police-citizen relations. Multilevel and comparative approaches: Neighbourhoods and states. 2. Recent trends in police-citizen relations and police reform in the United States
Ronald Weitzer
3. Ethnicity
group position and police legitimacy: Early findings from the European Social Survey
Ben Bradford
Jonathan Jackson and Mike Hough
4. Ethnic disparities in police-initiated controls of adolescents and attitudes towards the police in France and Germany: A tale of four cities
Dietrich Oberwittler and Sebastian Roché
5. Police legitimacy and public cooperation: Is Japan an outlier in the procedural justice model? Mai Sato
6. Why do Nigerians cooperate with the police? Legitimacy
procedural justice
and other contextual factors in Nigeria
Oluwagbenga Michael Akinlabi
Part III: Societal cleavages and legitimacy: Minorities and religions. 7. Policing marginalized groups in a diverse society: Using procedural justice to promote group belongingness and trust in police
Kristina Murphy and Adrian Cherney
8. Adolescents' divergent ethnic and religious identities and trust in the police. Combining micro- and macro-level determinants in a comparative analysis in France and Germany
Sebastian Roché
Anina Schwarzenbach
Dietrich Oberwittler and Jacques De Maillard
9. The impact of the Ferguson
MO police shooting on black and non-black residents' perceptions of police. Procedural justice
trust
and legitimacy
Tammy Rinehart Kochel
10. Why may police disobey the law? How divisions in society are a source of the moral right to do bad: the case of Turkey
Sebastian Roché
Mine Özäç¿lar and Ömer Bilen
Part IV: Procedural justice as cause and consequence. 11. Stop-and-Frisk and trust in police in Chicago
Wesley G. Skogan
12. Good cops
bad cops: Why do police officers treat citizens (dis)respectfully? Findings from Belgium
Maarten Van Craen
Stephan Parmentier and Mina Rauschenbach
13. Trust in the Finnish police and crime reporting-findings in the context of the Nordic countries
Juha Kääriäinen
Michal Tonry
Part I: Introduction. 1. Towards a broader view of police-citizen relations: How societal cleavages and political contexts shape trust and distrust
legitimacy and illegitimacy
Sebastian Roché and Dietrich Oberwittler
Part II: Police-citizen relations. Multilevel and comparative approaches: Neighbourhoods and states. 2. Recent trends in police-citizen relations and police reform in the United States
Ronald Weitzer
3. Ethnicity
group position and police legitimacy: Early findings from the European Social Survey
Ben Bradford
Jonathan Jackson and Mike Hough
4. Ethnic disparities in police-initiated controls of adolescents and attitudes towards the police in France and Germany: A tale of four cities
Dietrich Oberwittler and Sebastian Roché
5. Police legitimacy and public cooperation: Is Japan an outlier in the procedural justice model? Mai Sato
6. Why do Nigerians cooperate with the police? Legitimacy
procedural justice
and other contextual factors in Nigeria
Oluwagbenga Michael Akinlabi
Part III: Societal cleavages and legitimacy: Minorities and religions. 7. Policing marginalized groups in a diverse society: Using procedural justice to promote group belongingness and trust in police
Kristina Murphy and Adrian Cherney
8. Adolescents' divergent ethnic and religious identities and trust in the police. Combining micro- and macro-level determinants in a comparative analysis in France and Germany
Sebastian Roché
Anina Schwarzenbach
Dietrich Oberwittler and Jacques De Maillard
9. The impact of the Ferguson
MO police shooting on black and non-black residents' perceptions of police. Procedural justice
trust
and legitimacy
Tammy Rinehart Kochel
10. Why may police disobey the law? How divisions in society are a source of the moral right to do bad: the case of Turkey
Sebastian Roché
Mine Özäç¿lar and Ömer Bilen
Part IV: Procedural justice as cause and consequence. 11. Stop-and-Frisk and trust in police in Chicago
Wesley G. Skogan
12. Good cops
bad cops: Why do police officers treat citizens (dis)respectfully? Findings from Belgium
Maarten Van Craen
Stephan Parmentier and Mina Rauschenbach
13. Trust in the Finnish police and crime reporting-findings in the context of the Nordic countries
Juha Kääriäinen
Foreword
Michal Tonry
Part I: Introduction. 1. Towards a broader view of police-citizen relations: How societal cleavages and political contexts shape trust and distrust
legitimacy and illegitimacy
Sebastian Roché and Dietrich Oberwittler
Part II: Police-citizen relations. Multilevel and comparative approaches: Neighbourhoods and states. 2. Recent trends in police-citizen relations and police reform in the United States
Ronald Weitzer
3. Ethnicity
group position and police legitimacy: Early findings from the European Social Survey
Ben Bradford
Jonathan Jackson and Mike Hough
4. Ethnic disparities in police-initiated controls of adolescents and attitudes towards the police in France and Germany: A tale of four cities
Dietrich Oberwittler and Sebastian Roché
5. Police legitimacy and public cooperation: Is Japan an outlier in the procedural justice model? Mai Sato
6. Why do Nigerians cooperate with the police? Legitimacy
procedural justice
and other contextual factors in Nigeria
Oluwagbenga Michael Akinlabi
Part III: Societal cleavages and legitimacy: Minorities and religions. 7. Policing marginalized groups in a diverse society: Using procedural justice to promote group belongingness and trust in police
Kristina Murphy and Adrian Cherney
8. Adolescents' divergent ethnic and religious identities and trust in the police. Combining micro- and macro-level determinants in a comparative analysis in France and Germany
Sebastian Roché
Anina Schwarzenbach
Dietrich Oberwittler and Jacques De Maillard
9. The impact of the Ferguson
MO police shooting on black and non-black residents' perceptions of police. Procedural justice
trust
and legitimacy
Tammy Rinehart Kochel
10. Why may police disobey the law? How divisions in society are a source of the moral right to do bad: the case of Turkey
Sebastian Roché
Mine Özäç¿lar and Ömer Bilen
Part IV: Procedural justice as cause and consequence. 11. Stop-and-Frisk and trust in police in Chicago
Wesley G. Skogan
12. Good cops
bad cops: Why do police officers treat citizens (dis)respectfully? Findings from Belgium
Maarten Van Craen
Stephan Parmentier and Mina Rauschenbach
13. Trust in the Finnish police and crime reporting-findings in the context of the Nordic countries
Juha Kääriäinen
Michal Tonry
Part I: Introduction. 1. Towards a broader view of police-citizen relations: How societal cleavages and political contexts shape trust and distrust
legitimacy and illegitimacy
Sebastian Roché and Dietrich Oberwittler
Part II: Police-citizen relations. Multilevel and comparative approaches: Neighbourhoods and states. 2. Recent trends in police-citizen relations and police reform in the United States
Ronald Weitzer
3. Ethnicity
group position and police legitimacy: Early findings from the European Social Survey
Ben Bradford
Jonathan Jackson and Mike Hough
4. Ethnic disparities in police-initiated controls of adolescents and attitudes towards the police in France and Germany: A tale of four cities
Dietrich Oberwittler and Sebastian Roché
5. Police legitimacy and public cooperation: Is Japan an outlier in the procedural justice model? Mai Sato
6. Why do Nigerians cooperate with the police? Legitimacy
procedural justice
and other contextual factors in Nigeria
Oluwagbenga Michael Akinlabi
Part III: Societal cleavages and legitimacy: Minorities and religions. 7. Policing marginalized groups in a diverse society: Using procedural justice to promote group belongingness and trust in police
Kristina Murphy and Adrian Cherney
8. Adolescents' divergent ethnic and religious identities and trust in the police. Combining micro- and macro-level determinants in a comparative analysis in France and Germany
Sebastian Roché
Anina Schwarzenbach
Dietrich Oberwittler and Jacques De Maillard
9. The impact of the Ferguson
MO police shooting on black and non-black residents' perceptions of police. Procedural justice
trust
and legitimacy
Tammy Rinehart Kochel
10. Why may police disobey the law? How divisions in society are a source of the moral right to do bad: the case of Turkey
Sebastian Roché
Mine Özäç¿lar and Ömer Bilen
Part IV: Procedural justice as cause and consequence. 11. Stop-and-Frisk and trust in police in Chicago
Wesley G. Skogan
12. Good cops
bad cops: Why do police officers treat citizens (dis)respectfully? Findings from Belgium
Maarten Van Craen
Stephan Parmentier and Mina Rauschenbach
13. Trust in the Finnish police and crime reporting-findings in the context of the Nordic countries
Juha Kääriäinen