Sociologist Austin Turk and Policing: Structural Reinforcers and Reversals of the Positional Authority of Police
Autor: | Brian R. Kowalski, Richard J. Lundman |
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Rok vydání: | 2008 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Sociological Forum. 23:814-844 |
ISSN: | 1573-7861 0884-8971 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2008.00095.x |
Popis: | Austin Turk (1969) offers a distinctly sociological explanation of policing by theorizing that structural reinforcers (e.g., older police officer, younger citizen) and reversals (e.g., younger police officer, older citizen) of the situalionally absolute positional authority of police officers affect the relationship between police officers and citizens. To this point, however, there have been only three direct tests of Turk's theory (Greenleaf and Lanza-Kaduce, 1995; Lanza-Kaduce and Greenleaf, 2000, Weidner and Terrill, 2005). All have examined overt conflict and the results are mixed. The present research therefore adds a fourth test of Turk's (1969) theory to the sociological literature by examining the effects of structural reinforcers and reversals on citizens' perceptions of the legitimacy and propriety of police actions during routine traffic stop encounters. Net of control measures, including the legal reason for the traffic stop, and extra-legal measures, such as driver gender, the data provide modest to strong support for parts of Turk's (1969) theory and absolutely no support for others. The conclusion of the present study is that more research is needed to determine whether Turk (1969) is correct in theorizing that there is a sociology, and not just a social psychology, to police-citizen encounters. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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