Private Policing and Public Health: A Neglected Relationship

被引:20
作者
Wood, Jennifer D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Temple Univ, Criminal Justice, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA
关键词
police; private policing; public health; law enforcement; BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT DISTRICTS; OPIOID OVERDOSE DEATHS; LAW-ENFORCEMENT; MENTAL-ILLNESS; SEX WORKERS; HOT-SPOTS; NEW-YORK; SECURITY; CRIME; ENCOUNTERS;
D O I
10.1177/1043986219890191
中图分类号
DF [法律]; D9 [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Policing, in its various forms and dimensions, has indelible and complex connections to public health. The conventional functions of policing-promoting social order, security, and crime prevention-are animated by many issues easily framed by a public health lens (e.g., forms of violence, mental illnesses, drug abuse, homelessness). Policing with a crime control focus can make public health worse by criminalizing vulnerable people and undermining access to health and harm reduction resources. Conversely, policing with a health focus can help link vulnerable people to treatment and recovery-oriented resources. Recognizing these connections, researchers have largely focused on the public health effects of policing by the public police, and practitioners have worked to transform the public police with population health in mind. This article suggests that although this focus on transforming the public police is necessary to the advancement of public health, it neglects to understand connections between private policing and public health. This conceptual article argues for the need to widen our focus beyond the public police when exploring policing's relationship to public health. This expanded view, I suggest, is important to discovering the ways in which the health vulnerabilities of people and places may be compromised by different policing mentalities and practices. At the same time, it may provide clues about ways in which policing beyond the police might creatively and virtuously promote public health.
引用
收藏
页码:19 / 38
页数:20
相关论文
共 98 条
[1]   Security Beyond the State: Global Security Assemblages in International Politics [J].
Abrahamsen, Rita ;
Williams, Michael C. .
INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY, 2009, 3 (01) :1-17
[2]   Profiling of victimization, perpetration, and participation: A latent class analysis among people with severe mental illness [J].
Albers, Wendy M. M. ;
Roeg, Diana P. K. ;
Nijssen, Yolanda ;
van Weeghel, Jaap ;
Bongers, Inge M. B. .
PLOS ONE, 2018, 13 (11)
[3]   Policing and public health: Not quite the right analogy [J].
Anderson, Evan ;
Burris, Scott .
POLICING & SOCIETY, 2017, 27 (03) :300-313
[4]  
[Anonymous], AUSTRALASIAN POLICIN
[5]  
[Anonymous], 2001, The New Structure of Policing: Description, Conceptualization, and Research Agenda
[6]  
[Anonymous], 1999, Criminal Law Bulletin
[7]  
Baltimore Police Department, 2017, POL 806 LAW ENF ASS
[8]   Conceptual divides and practice synergies in law enforcement and public health: some lessons from policing vulnerability in Australia [J].
Bartkowiak-Theron, Isabelle ;
Asquith, Nicole L. .
POLICING & SOCIETY, 2017, 27 (03) :276-288
[9]   Severe mental illness and firearm access: Is violence really the danger? [J].
Baumann, Miranda Lynne ;
Teasdale, Brent .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LAW AND PSYCHIATRY, 2018, 56 :44-49
[10]   The future of policing [J].
Bayley, DH ;
Shearing, CD .
LAW & SOCIETY REVIEW, 1996, 30 (03) :585-606