NCJ Number
              133484
          Journal
  Policing and Society Volume: 2 Issue: 1 Dated: (1991) Pages: 1-15
Date Published
  1991
Length
              15 pages
          Annotation
              Discussing the origins and significance of Afro-Caribbean hostility toward the British police, this paper argues that the predisposing conditions include a history of racist immigration control, continuing racial attacks and harassment, high black unemployment, and conflict over cannabis.
          Abstract
              A review of the available evidence shows black hostility to be located in personal experience, adversarial encounters to provoke a hostile response to the police, and black hostility to relate to an adversarial balance of encounters between the police and black people. The findings also reveal that individual experience alone fails to explain the difference in views between Afro-Caribbean and white people. There are many indications that black hostility to the police is a group-level phenomenon; it emerges as a political force and part of the assertion of identity by a social and cultural group. 13 references
          