Community characteristics and policing styles in suburban agencies

Recent policing reforms have strongly emphasized the role of community context in determining the form and content of effective policing, along with the traditional influence of organizational structures. Recognizing the increasing suburbanization of US communities, this study examines the empirical...

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Published inPolicing : an international journal of police strategies & management Vol. 26; no. 4; pp. 566 - 590
Main Authors Wells, L. Edward, Falcone, David N, Rabe-Hemp, Cara
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bradford MCB UP Ltd 01.01.2003
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
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Summary:Recent policing reforms have strongly emphasized the role of community context in determining the form and content of effective policing, along with the traditional influence of organizational structures. Recognizing the increasing suburbanization of US communities, this study examines the empirical support for the underlying contextual and structural premises of these reforms in a sample of midwestern suburban communities. Merging data from a telephone survey of 194 municipal police departments in the five counties of the Chicago metropolitan statistical area with data on communities from other government sources, multiple regression was used to assess the relative importance of community context and organizational structure factors in accounting for differences in departmental policing styles. The findings both support and contradict some basic assumptions of current community-oriented policing reforms, as well as some of the findings of prior studies. They underline the importance of empirically testing our theoretical assumptions in all types of community settings.
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ISSN:1363-951X
1758-695X
DOI:10.1108/13639510310503523