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Journal ArticleDOI

Shaping Citizen Perceptions of Police Legitimacy: A Randomized Field Trial of Procedural Justice

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors examine both the direct and indirect outcomes of procedural justice policing, tested under randomized field trial conditions, and assess whether police can enhance perceptions of legitimacy during a short, police-initiated and procedurally just traffic encounter and how this single encounter shapes general views of police.
Abstract
Exploring the relationship between procedural justice and citizen perceptions of police is a well-trodden pathway. Studies show that when citizens perceive the police acting in a procedurally just manner-by treating people with dignity and respect, and by being fair and neutral in their actions-they view the police as legitimate and are more likely to comply with directives and cooperate with police. Our article examines both the direct and the indirect outcomes of procedural justice policing, tested under randomized field trial conditions. We assess whether police can enhance perceptions of legitimacy during a short, police-initiated and procedurally just traffic encounter and how this single encounter shapes general views of police. Our results show significant differences between the control and experimental conditions: Procedurally just traffic encounters with police (experimental condition) shape citizen views about the actual encounter directly and general orientations toward the police relative to business-as-usual traffic stops in the control group. The theorized model is supported by our research, demonstrating that the police have much to gain from acting fairly during even short encounters with citizens.

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Compliance, noncompliance, and the in-between: causal effects of civilian demeanor on police officers’ cognitions and emotions

TL;DR: In this article, a series of three randomized vignettes involving routine police-civilian encounters were administered to 546 officers working in a large city in the southwestern United States.
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Punishment and solidarity? An experimental test of the educative-moralizing effects of legal sanctions

TL;DR: This paper found that punishment may play an important role in reducing the emotional impact of crime on citizens, by attenuating potentially criminogenic emotional reactions to crime, such as anger, when the offender is caught and punished it appears to diminish the aversive emotional reactions caused by learning that a crime was committed in the first place.
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Willingness to report sexual offenses to the police in Ghana

TL;DR: It is found that women in Ghana would report sexual offenses because they want the offender to be caught and punished, and because crimes should be reported.
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Broadening campus threat assessment beyond mass shootings

TL;DR: Viewing campus threat assessment within the broader violence prevention framework can advance the efficiency, effectiveness, and applicability of the approach.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cutoff criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis : Conventional criteria versus new alternatives

TL;DR: In this article, the adequacy of the conventional cutoff criteria and several new alternatives for various fit indexes used to evaluate model fit in practice were examined, and the results suggest that, for the ML method, a cutoff value close to.95 for TLI, BL89, CFI, RNI, and G...
Book

Using multivariate statistics

TL;DR: In this Section: 1. Multivariate Statistics: Why? and 2. A Guide to Statistical Techniques: Using the Book Research Questions and Associated Techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI

Confidence Limits for the Indirect Effect: Distribution of the Product and Resampling Methods.

TL;DR: Two alternatives for improving the performance of confidence limits for the indirect effect are evaluated: a method based on the distribution of the product of two normal random variables, and resampling methods.
Book

Why people obey the law

TL;DR: This paper found that people obey the law if they believe it's legitimate, not because they fear punishment, which is the conclusion of Tom Tyler's classic study, "People obey law primarily because they believe in respecting legitimate authority".