Cooperating with the Police as an Act of Social Control - Trust and Neighbourhood Concerns as Predictors of Public Assistance
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 cooperat...
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Scandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget)
2016-01-01
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doaj-b27b93128e2e46fba39c61205377b8982020-11-25T03:21:41ZdanScandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget)Nordisk Politiforskning1894-86932016-01-01311113110.18261/issn.1894-8693-2016-02-0418948693Cooperating with the Police as an Act of Social Control - Trust and Neighbourhood Concerns as Predictors of Public AssistanceBen Bradford Jonathan JacksonCalling 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. Notably, police may garner public cooperation when social cohesion is perceived to be high and when there seem to be challenges to the established moral order.https://www.idunn.no/nordisk_politiforskning/2016/02/cooperating_with_the_police_asan_act_of_social_control_-_tTrust in the policeinformal social controlpublic cooperation with policeTrustinthepoliceinformalsocialcontrolpubliccooperationwithpolice |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
Danish |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ben Bradford Jonathan Jackson |
spellingShingle |
Ben Bradford Jonathan Jackson Cooperating with the Police as an Act of Social Control - Trust and Neighbourhood Concerns as Predictors of Public Assistance Nordisk Politiforskning Trust in the police informal social control public cooperation with police Trustinthepolice informalsocialcontrol publiccooperationwithpolice |
author_facet |
Ben Bradford Jonathan Jackson |
author_sort |
Ben Bradford |
title |
Cooperating with the Police as an Act of Social Control - Trust and Neighbourhood Concerns as Predictors of Public Assistance |
title_short |
Cooperating with the Police as an Act of Social Control - Trust and Neighbourhood Concerns as Predictors of Public Assistance |
title_full |
Cooperating with the Police as an Act of Social Control - Trust and Neighbourhood Concerns as Predictors of Public Assistance |
title_fullStr |
Cooperating with the Police as an Act of Social Control - Trust and Neighbourhood Concerns as Predictors of Public Assistance |
title_full_unstemmed |
Cooperating with the Police as an Act of Social Control - Trust and Neighbourhood Concerns as Predictors of Public Assistance |
title_sort |
cooperating with the police as an act of social control - trust and neighbourhood concerns as predictors of public assistance |
publisher |
Scandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget) |
series |
Nordisk Politiforskning |
issn |
1894-8693 |
publishDate |
2016-01-01 |
description |
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. Notably, police may garner public cooperation when social cohesion is perceived to be high and when there seem to be challenges to the established moral order. |
topic |
Trust in the police informal social control public cooperation with police Trustinthepolice informalsocialcontrol publiccooperationwithpolice |
url |
https://www.idunn.no/nordisk_politiforskning/2016/02/cooperating_with_the_police_asan_act_of_social_control_-_t |
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