TY - JOUR PY - 1985// TI - Police Management of Public Drunkenness in Scotland JO - British journal of criminology A1 - McLaughlin, P. SP - 344 EP - 364 VL - 25 IS - 4 N2 - This paper considers the impact of individual attitudes, experitnces and perceptions on the routine management of public drunkenness. The study, which was conducted in a division of a Scottish police force over a six-months period, involved interviews and informal discussions with 66 police officers , analysis of police reports, and direct observation of police-inebriate encounters. The characteristics of police encounters wilh public drunks and the factors that might influence decision-making in such situations are discussed with reference to the data collected from these various sources. Observed differences in patterm of response-the operation of police discretion through informal controls--are related to attitudinal, environmental and organisational variables. The findings are discussed in term of their possible implications for the implementation of alternative management strategus which seek to divert the public drunk from criminal justice processing.
LA - SN - 0007-0955 UR - http://dx.doi.org/ ID - ref1 ER -