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Experience, quality of life, and neighborhood context: A hierarchical analysis of satisfaction with police

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TLDR
In this paper, three different conceptual models (experience with police, quality of life, and neighborhood context) were tested for directional accuracy and ability to explain satisfaction with the police.
Abstract
We test three different conceptual models—“experience with police,” “quality of life,” and “neighborhood context”—for directional accuracy and ability to explain satisfaction with the police. We also investigate whether these models help to explain the common finding that African-Americans are more dissatisfied with the police than are Caucasians. To do so, we use hierarchical linear modeling to simultaneously regress our outcome measure on clusters of citizen- and neighborhood-level variables. The analysis was conducted using recently collected information from the Project on Policing Neighborhoods (POPN). The data file consisted of survey responses from 5,361 citizens residing in 58 neighborhoods located in Indianapolis, Indiana and St. Petersburg, Florida. At the citizen level, the psychologically based “quality of life” model accounts for the greatest proportion of explained variance and provides the greatest directional accuracy. Also, residents of neighborhoods characterized by concentrated disadvan...

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New Directions in Social Disorganization Theory

TL;DR: In this article, the relationship between neighborhood structure, social control, and crime has been studied in the context of social disorganization theory, and some promising new directions in social disorganized theory have been charted.
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Perceptions of the police

TL;DR: A review of the literature indicates that only four variables (age, contact with police, neighborhood, and race) have consistently been proven to consistently affect attitudes toward the police.
Journal ArticleDOI

Asymmetry in the Impact of Encounters with Police

TL;DR: The authors examined the impact of personal experience on popular assessments of the quality of police service and found that having a bad experience is four to fourteen times as great as having a positive experience, and the coefficients associated with havi...
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Neighborhood Context and Police Use of Force

TL;DR: This article examined the influence of neighborhood context on the level of force police exercise during police-suspect encounters using hierarchical linear modeling techniques and found that police officers are significantly more likely to use higher levels of force when suspects are encountered in disadvantaged neighborhoods and those with higher homicide rates, net of situational factors and officer-based determinants.
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We never call the cops and here is why: a qualitative examination of legal cynicism in three philadelphia neighborhoods*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present data from the completed first wave of a multi-wave comparative study of crime, danger, and informal social control that focuses on youth living in three high-crime neighborhoods in Philadelphia, PA (N= 147).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Using the correct statistical test for the equality of regression coefficients

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors point out that one of these estimators is correct while the other is incorrect, which biases one's hypothesis test in favor of rejecting the null hypothesis that b1= b2.
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Beyond Social Capital: Spatial Dynamics of Collective Efficacy for Children

TL;DR: The authors examined variations in intergenerational closure, reciprocal local exchange, and shared expectations for informal social control across 342 neighborhoods in Chicago and found that residential stability and concentrated affluence, more so than poverty and racial/ethnic composition, predict intergeneration closure and reciprocal exchange, while concentrated disadvantage is associated with sharply lower expectations for shared child control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Methods for Comparing Regression Coefficients Between Models

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare regression coefficients between models in the setting where one of the models is nested in the other, and propose fundamental change in strategies for model comparison in social research as well as modifications in the presentation of results from regression or regression-type models.
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Legal Cynicism and (Subcultural?) Tolerance of Deviance: The Neighborhood Context of Racial Differences

TL;DR: In this paper, a neighborhood-level perspective on racial differences in legal cynicism, dissatisfaction with police, and the tolerance of various forms of deviance is presented. But the authors do not examine the relationship between race and tolerance for deviance.
Book

Police for the Future

TL;DR: In this article, a systematic assessment of the performance of the police institution as a whole in preventing crime is provided, based on exhaustive research, interviews, and first hand observation in five countries-Australia, Canada, Great Britain, Japan, and the United States.
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