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Integrated Contextual Model of Confidence in Local Police

NCJ Number
242848
Journal
Police Quarterly Volume: 15 Issue: 4 Dated: December 2012 Pages: 414-445
Author(s)
Ralph B. Taylor; Brian A. Lawton
Date Published
December 2012
Length
32 pages
Annotation
This study examined residents' confidence in local police.
Abstract
Current work tests an integrated contextual model of confidence in local police. The model addresses four questions. (a) Do incivilities, procedural justice, and local social climate each affect confidence? (b) Do incivilities more powerfully corrode confidence at some points along the urban versus rural continuum? (c) Where on the continuum is confidence weakest? (d) Does confidence in local police bolster confidence in the broader justice system? Surveys from households across the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania were supplemented with municipality-level census and reported crime data, and county-level urban versus rural continuum codes. Findings showed significant net effects of both procedural justice and incivilities on the outcome; strongest corrosive impacts of incivilities in rural counties; lowest confidence in rural counties; and connections between confidence in local police and confidence in the broader criminal justice system. Results underscore the broad importance of police simultaneously maintaining order and treating citizens fairly. Abstract published by arrangement with Sage Journals.