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Police and Community Perceptions of the Community Role in Policing: The Philadelphia Experience

NCJ Number
117747
Journal
Howard Journal of Criminal Law Volume: 28 Issue: 2 Dated: (May 1989) Pages: 105-123
Author(s)
J R Greene; S H Decker
Date Published
1989
Length
19 pages
Annotation
Police and community relations have long occupied the attention of the police and the public.
Abstract
The recent emergence of community policing philosophy emphasizes closer involvement of police and community residents, yet to date has ignored the perceptions of the police and the public toward each other's role in affecting social control. Fifty Philadelphia police officers and 24 community residents, participating in a community/police educational programme called Project COPE provide information on police and community attitudes toward responsibility for crime control, support for and antagonism toward police actions, and the quality of police citizen interactions. Preliminary findings from a before and after analysis of programme participants suggest that relations between these two groups may be strained by police officer and agency acceptance of public criticism. (Author abstract)