Jackson's expertise shines in this innovative analysis of the
link between social inequality and law enforcement efforts. The
research connects the level of conflict characterizing
majority-minority relations to the level of financial investment in
police resources. . . . Readers will find scholarly attention to
theory, responsible implications for policy, and a careful
diagnosis of the limits to law enforcement, along with a
bibliography that reflects the cutting edge of research. This book
should be available wherever a program in criminology,
stratification, or criminal justice studies exists. "Choice"
In a major contribution to the criminology literature, Pamela
Irving Jackson examines the societal expectations for police
work--from national, regional, and local perspectives--and attempts
to identify the conflicts within these expectations. Basing her
study upon quantitative analysis of the determinants of police
spending in cities throughout the United States during the 1970s,
Jackson demonstrates that the history, traditions, socioeconomic
traits, and racial and ethnic population mix characteristic of each
social context influence the expectations set for police officers
and the support they are accorded. An exploration of newspapers'
treatment of the police and issues of police/minority relations in
selected cities adds depth to the analysis by providing the public
perspective on policing and its variations by location and time
period.
The author's central thesis is that the mobilization of
municipal police resources in the early 1970s was influenced by the
size of the minority population in the city, especially in
locations of historical tension in minority/majority relations. By
the end of the decade, Jackson shows, the impact of minority threat
in determining municipal police appropriations had changed in form
and focus and there developed a new awareness of the role of police
and a corresponding recognition of the stress under which
individual officers operate. Her conclusions regarding the effect
of unrealistic expectations on the overall performance of police
work offer an important counterweight to arguments that the police
failed to control escalating crime or resort too often to violence
in the performance of of their duties. An excellent supplementary
text for courses in criminology, criminal justice, and sociology,
this book offers a realistic appraisal of the limits of police work
that will enable policymakers and the police themselves to make a
more accurate determination of the situation in which police work
can be most useful.
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