警察工会、种族和对警察的信任

IF 0.8 4区 社会学 Q3 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Daniel DiSalvo, Matthew G. Nagler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人们早就认识到,信任对政治机构的有效运作有着至关重要的影响,但对警察——一种经典的秩序机构——信任的决定因素仍然没有得到很好的理解。我们研究了警察工会化对警察信任的影响,特别是在美国多种族背景下,在调解警察杀害平民对信任的不利影响方面。我们分析了2006年社会资本社区基准调查中11个大都市统计区约5000名受访者的信任反应和相应的人口统计数据,并与另外三个数据集中的相关城市和州级相关数据相匹配。我们的研究结果证实了先前的研究结果,即黑人和非黑人之间的信任存在巨大差距。尽管警察杀害平民通常会降低非黑人的信任,同时不影响黑人的信任水平,但我们发现,在警察集体谈判的司法管辖区,非黑人信任的下降实际上已经消除,这表明警察工会化本质上助长了黑人和非黑人对警察的信任两极分化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Police Unions, Race, and Trust in the Police
It has long been recognized that trust critically influences the effective functioning of political institutions, yet the determinants of trust in the police—a classic order institution—are still not well understood. We examine the effect of police unionization on trust in the police and, in particular, in mediating the adverse impacts of police killings of civilians on trust within the U.S. multiracial context. We analyze trust responses and corresponding demographic data on approximately 5,000 respondents across eleven metropolitan statistical areas from the 2006 Social Capital Community Benchmark Survey, matched to relevant city- and state-level correlates from three additional data sets. Our results confirm prior studies’ findings of a large gap between Black and non-Black trust. Although police killings of civilians normally reduce trust among non-Black people while leaving Black levels of trust unaffected, we find that in jurisdictions where police bargain collectively the drop in non-Black trust is effectively eliminated, suggesting that police unionization essentially abets the polarization of trust in the police between Black people and non-Black people.
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来源期刊
Political Science Quarterly
Political Science Quarterly POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
111
期刊介绍: Published continuously since 1886, Political Science Quarterly or PSQ is the most widely read and accessible scholarly journal covering government, politics and policy. A nonpartisan journal, PSQ is edited for both political scientists and general readers with a keen interest in public and foreign affairs. Each article is based on objective evidence and is fully refereed.
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