Justifying violence: legitimacy, ideology and public support for police use of force

被引:92
|
作者
Gerber, Monica M. [1 ]
Jackson, Jonathan [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Diego Port, Dept Sociol, Santiago, Chile
[2] London Sch Econ, Dept Methodol, London, England
关键词
Attitudes towards police use of force; legitimacy; right-wing authoritarianism; social dominance orientation; SOCIAL-DOMINANCE ORIENTATION; RIGHT-WING AUTHORITARIANISM; PROCEDURAL JUSTICE; ATTITUDES; PERCEPTIONS; AGGRESSION; AUTHORITY; MEDIATION; THREAT; RACE;
D O I
10.1080/1068316X.2016.1220556
中图分类号
DF [法律]; D9 [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Under what conditions do people support police use of force? In this paper we assess some of the empirical links between police legitimacy, political ideology (right-wing authoritarianism and social dominance orientation), and support for reasonable' use of force (e.g. an officer striking a citizen in self-defence) and excessive' use of force (e.g. an officer using violence to arrest an unarmed person who is not offering violent resistance). Analysing data from an online survey with US participants (n=186) we find that legitimacy is a positive predictor of reasonable but not excessive police use of force, and that political ideology predicts support for excessive but not reasonable use of force. We conclude with the idea that legitimacy places normative constraints around police power. On the one hand, legitimacy is associated with increased support for the use of force, but only when violence is bounded within certain acceptable limits. On the other hand, excessive use of force seems to require an extra-legal justification that is - at least in our analysis - partly ideological. Our findings open up a new direction of research in what is currently a rather sparse psychological literature on the ability of legitimacy to tame' coercive power.
引用
收藏
页码:79 / 95
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Public support for police use of SWAT: examining the relevance of legitimacy
    Moule, Richard K., Jr.
    Parry, Megan M.
    Fox, Bryanna
    JOURNAL OF CRIME & JUSTICE, 2019, 42 (01) : 45 - 59
  • [2] Police legitimacy and support for vigilante violence in Pakistan
    Tankebe, Justice
    Asif, Muhammad
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE AND APPLIED CRIMINAL JUSTICE, 2016, 40 (04) : 295 - 314
  • [3] Monopolizing Force? Police Legitimacy and Public Attitudes Toward the Acceptability of Violence
    Jackson, Jonathan
    Huq, Aziz Z.
    Bradford, Ben
    Tyler, Tom R.
    PSYCHOLOGY PUBLIC POLICY AND LAW, 2013, 19 (04) : 479 - 497
  • [4] Identity, legitimacy and "making sense" of police use of force
    Bradford, Ben
    Milani, Jenna
    Jackson, Jonathan
    POLICING-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF POLICE STRATEGIES & MANAGEMENT, 2017, 40 (03) : 614 - 627
  • [5] Explaining police support for the use of force and vigilante violence in Ghana
    Tankebe, Justice
    POLICING & SOCIETY, 2011, 21 (02) : 129 - 149
  • [6] "Badge of Honor": Honor Ideology, Police Legitimacy, and Perceptions of Police Violence
    Pomerantz, Aaron L.
    Bell, Kevin
    Green, Kevin
    Foster, Stephen
    Carvallo, Mauricio
    Schow, Peyton
    JOURNAL OF POLICE AND CRIMINAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 36 (03) : 473 - 489
  • [7] LIVE FACIAL RECOGNITION: TRUST AND LEGITIMACY AS PREDICTORS OF PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR POLICE USE OF NEW TECHNOLOGY
    Bradford, Ben
    Yesberg, Julia A.
    Jackson, Jonathan
    Dawson, Paul
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY, 2020, 60 (06) : 1502 - 1522
  • [8] Police legitimacy regimes and the suppression of citizen oversight in response to police violence
    Beardall, Theresa Rocha
    CRIMINOLOGY, 2022, 60 (04) : 740 - 765
  • [9] The Force of Fear: Police Stereotype Threat, Self-Legitimacy, and Support for Excessive Force
    Trinkner, Rick
    Kerrison, Erin M.
    Goff, Phillip Atiba
    LAW AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2019, 43 (05) : 421 - 435
  • [10] Public support for expanding DNA databases: police empowerment and the normative and instrumental models of police legitimacy in South Korea
    Kuen, Kiseong
    Johnson, Devon
    Ra, Kwang Hyun
    Kim, Yeon Soo
    POLICING & SOCIETY, 2025, 35 (02) : 236 - 254