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Journal Article

Citation

Boivin R, Faubert C, Gendron A, Poulin B. Police Pract. Res. 2020; 21(1): 49-61.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/15614263.2018.1555480

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Any depiction of police culture includes a strong 'us versus them' element, but research has been unable to satisfactorily explain its development and evolution. In particular, very few studies have focused on the training period, between when an individual chooses a police career and his/her first day as an officer. A total of 1,979 pre-university students from seven colleges in Quebec (Canada) completed a self-administered survey where they had to answer general questions about the police followed by specific questions about four realistic videos of fictional police interventions involving use of force. Unsurprisingly, the analysis suggests that students in Police Technology tend to think they are more supportive of the police and the use of force than students in other programs. However, students in Police Technology increasingly indicate that the majority of people would report a more negative opinion than they have, suggesting that police candidates increasingly disidentify with the rest of the population.


Language: en

Keywords

attitudes about police; Police use of force; professional socialization; us versus them mentality

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