Police attitudes
Police Integrity, Responsibility, and Discipline
Police Leadership and the Reconciliation of Police-Minority Relations
Police Officer Attitudes Toward Peers, Supervisors, and Citizens: A Comparison Between Field Training Officers and Regular Officers
Influence of Race/Ethnicity, Social Class, and Neighborhood Context on Residents' Attitudes Toward the Police
Police Control of Interpersonal Disputes
Helping Hand of the Law: Police Control of Citizens on Request
How Does Reactivity Affect Police Behavior?: Describing and Quantifying the Impact of Reactivity as Behavioral Change in a Large-Scale Observational Study of Police
Identity-Linked Perceptions of the Police Among African American Juvenile Offenders: A Developmental Perspective
Drug Use Among Domestic Marijuana Growers
Structural Arrangements in Large Municipal Police Organizations: Revisiting Wilson's Theory of Local Political Culture
Police Involvement in Counter-Terrorism and Public Attitudes Towards the Police in Israel 1998-2007
Global and Specific Attitudes Toward the Police: Disentangling the Relationship
Citizens' Perceptions of Aggressive Traffic Enforcement Strategies
Distinguishing Organizational From Strategy Commitment: Linking Officers' Commitment to Community Policing to Job Behaviors and Satisfaction
Explaining Police Officer Discretionary Activity
Police-Probation Partnerships: Professional Identity and the Sharing of Coercive Power
Influence of "Working Rules" on Police Suspicion and Discretionary Decision Making
Attitudes Toward the Police in Communities Using Different Consolidation Models
Factorial Analysis of Police Pursuit Driving Decisions: A Research Note
Unpacking Public Attitudes to the Police: Contrasting Perceptions of Misconduct with Traditional Measures of Satisfaction
Encounters Between Police Officers and Youths: The Social Costs of Disrespect
Police Interactions With Victims of Violence
Law Enforcement Organization (LEO) Survey
The State of the Police Field: A New Professionalism in Policing?
Panelists debate the premise of a Harvard Executive Session working paper that suggests police organizations are striving for a "new" professionalism. Leaders are endeavoring for stricter standards of efficiency and conduct, while also increasing their legitimacy to the public and encouraging innovation. Is this new? Will this idea lead to prematurely discarding community policing as a guiding philosophy?