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Book Review: Good Cop/Bad Cop: Mass Media and the Cycle of Police Reform

Penelope J. Hanke
- 01 May 2005 - 
- Vol. 30, Iss: 1, pp 123-125
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This article is published in Criminal Justice Review.The article was published on 2005-05-01. It has received 22 citations till now.

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We Predict a Riot?Public Order Policing, New Media Environments and the Rise of the Citizen Journalist

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the rise of citizen journalism and consider its implications for the policing and news media reporting of public protests in the twenty-first century, focusing on the use and impact of multi-media technologies during the 2009 G20 Summit Protests in London and evaluates their role in shaping the subsequent representation of protest as news.
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Police corporate communications, crime reporting and the shaping of policing news

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine recent developments in police non-operational communications, explore the current dynamics of the relationship between crime reporters and their police sources and consider the implications for the "shaping" of policing and crime news.
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‘Cop[ying] it Sweet’: Police Media Units and the Making of News

TL;DR: The authors assesses the journalistic deployment of PMU information and develops a broader sociopolitical argument explaining the growth of PMUs more generally, using the example of the New South Wales Police Media Unit in Australia (hereafter NSW PMU).
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Shock value: A comparative analysis of news reports and official police records on TASER deployments

TL;DR: In this paper, a comparative analysis of news reports and official police records of TASER deployments from 2002 to 2005 was conducted, and the authors concluded that the significant predictors of continued suspect resistance and repeated use of the taser by an officer are the circumstances in which the weapon is deployed, the characteristics of the suspects involved in the tasER incidents, and their significant predictor of continued resistence.
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The presentation of police in everyday life: Police–press relations, impression management and the Leveson Inquiry:

TL;DR: In 2012, the Leveson Inquiry investigated relations between the police and the press, examining the routine systems and processes of police-press relations in the UK and, more specifically, the conduct of senior Metropolitan Police Service officers during an investigation into phone-hacking (Operation Caryatid) as mentioned in this paper.