Considers the impact of a range of variables on confidence in the police, including those given little or no previous attention, e.g. measures of crime experience and of conservative political orientation. Draws data from a larger study of urban crime‐prevention issues based on Cincinnati, Ohio. Finds that respondents’ race is not a significant determinant of confidence in the police; the most important determinant being the community context. Suggests that neighborhood social integration may provide a supportive context which could encourage positive evaluation of formal institutional arrangements. Finds that attitudes toward the police (ATP) are regulated by the social context and that much of the existing research, which excluded contextual variables, may have been wrong in making race a significant variable. Notes that confidence in the police is higher in women than in men, but this may be due to a lower rate of antagonistic contact between police and women (not measured here).
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1 March 1996
Research Article|
March 01 1996
Race, community context and confidence in the police Available to Purchase
Francis T. Cullen
Francis T. Cullen
University of Cincinnati
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2160-0309
Print ISSN: 0735-8547
© MCB UP Limited
1996
American Journal of Police (1996) 15 (1): 3–22.
Citation
Cao L, Frank J, Cullen FT (1996), "Race, community context and confidence in the police". American Journal of Police, Vol. 15 No. 1 pp. 3–22, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/07358549610116536
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