Objectification of the Subject through the Exercise of Power: An Ethnographical Inquiry of Power in an American Policing Organization

abstract: A void exists in public administration, criminology, and criminal justice research as it relates to the study of power in American policing agencies. This has significant ramifications for academia and practitioners in terms of how they view, address, study, and interpret behaviors/actions...

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Other Authors: Bentley, Paul Christopher (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.17909
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-179092018-06-22T03:03:56Z Objectification of the Subject through the Exercise of Power: An Ethnographical Inquiry of Power in an American Policing Organization abstract: A void exists in public administration, criminology, and criminal justice research as it relates to the study of power in American policing agencies. This has significant ramifications for academia and practitioners in terms of how they view, address, study, and interpret behaviors/actions in American policing agencies and organizations in general. In brief, mainstream research on power in organizations does not take into account relationships of power that do not act directly, and immediately, on others. By placing its emphasis on an agency centric perspective of power, the mainstream approach to the study of power fails to recognize indirect power relationships that influence discourse, pedagogy, mechanisms of communication, knowledge, and individual behavior/actions. In support of a more holistic inquiry, this study incorporates a Foucauldian perspective of power along with an ethnographical methodology and methods to build a greater understanding of power in policing organizations. This ethnography of an American policing organization illuminates the relationship between the exercise of power and the objectification of the subject through the interplay of relationships of communication, goal oriented activities, and relationships of power. Specifically, the findings demonstrate that sworn officers and civilian employees are objectified distinctly and dissimilarly. In summary, this study argues that the exercise of power in this American policing organization objectifies the civilian employee as a second class citizen. Dissertation/Thesis Bentley, Paul Christopher (Author) Catlaw, Thomas (Advisor) Musheno, Michael (Committee member) Lucio, Joanna (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Public administration Criminology Behavior Ethnography Foucault Organization Policing Power eng 307 pages Ph.D. Public Administration 2013 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.17909 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2013
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Public administration
Criminology
Behavior
Ethnography
Foucault
Organization
Policing
Power
spellingShingle Public administration
Criminology
Behavior
Ethnography
Foucault
Organization
Policing
Power
Objectification of the Subject through the Exercise of Power: An Ethnographical Inquiry of Power in an American Policing Organization
description abstract: A void exists in public administration, criminology, and criminal justice research as it relates to the study of power in American policing agencies. This has significant ramifications for academia and practitioners in terms of how they view, address, study, and interpret behaviors/actions in American policing agencies and organizations in general. In brief, mainstream research on power in organizations does not take into account relationships of power that do not act directly, and immediately, on others. By placing its emphasis on an agency centric perspective of power, the mainstream approach to the study of power fails to recognize indirect power relationships that influence discourse, pedagogy, mechanisms of communication, knowledge, and individual behavior/actions. In support of a more holistic inquiry, this study incorporates a Foucauldian perspective of power along with an ethnographical methodology and methods to build a greater understanding of power in policing organizations. This ethnography of an American policing organization illuminates the relationship between the exercise of power and the objectification of the subject through the interplay of relationships of communication, goal oriented activities, and relationships of power. Specifically, the findings demonstrate that sworn officers and civilian employees are objectified distinctly and dissimilarly. In summary, this study argues that the exercise of power in this American policing organization objectifies the civilian employee as a second class citizen. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Public Administration 2013
author2 Bentley, Paul Christopher (Author)
author_facet Bentley, Paul Christopher (Author)
title Objectification of the Subject through the Exercise of Power: An Ethnographical Inquiry of Power in an American Policing Organization
title_short Objectification of the Subject through the Exercise of Power: An Ethnographical Inquiry of Power in an American Policing Organization
title_full Objectification of the Subject through the Exercise of Power: An Ethnographical Inquiry of Power in an American Policing Organization
title_fullStr Objectification of the Subject through the Exercise of Power: An Ethnographical Inquiry of Power in an American Policing Organization
title_full_unstemmed Objectification of the Subject through the Exercise of Power: An Ethnographical Inquiry of Power in an American Policing Organization
title_sort objectification of the subject through the exercise of power: an ethnographical inquiry of power in an american policing organization
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.17909
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