Aggressive policing and undermined legitimacy: assessing the impact of police stops at gunpoint on perceptions of police in São Paulo, Brazil

被引:0
作者
Thiago R. Oliveira
机构
[1] University of Surrey and Nuffield College,Department of Sociology
[2] University of Oxford,undefined
来源
Journal of Experimental Criminology | 2024年 / 20卷
关键词
Aggressive policing; Brazil; Causal inference with panel data; Perceptions of police; Police legitimacy; Police stops; Procedural justice;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
引用
收藏
页码:83 / 121
页数:38
相关论文
共 186 条
[1]  
An W(2017)Causal inference in panel data with application to estimating race-of-interviewer effects in the General Social Survey Sociological Methods & Research 46 68-102
[2]  
Winship C(2016)Updating perceptions of (in)justice Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 53 255-286
[3]  
Augustyn MB(2018)The relationship between police procedural justice, police legitimacy, and people’s willingness to cooperate with law enforcement: A meta-analysis Redefine statistical significance. Nature human behaviour 2 6-10
[4]  
Benjamin DJ(2019)Beyond procedural justice: A dialogic approach to legitimacy in criminal justice Journal of Criminal Justice 60 93-99
[5]  
Berger JO(2012)Contact and confidence: Revisiting the impact of public encounters with the police Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 102 119-170
[6]  
Johannesson M(2009)Self-legitimacy, police culture and support for democratic policing in an english constabulary Policing & Society 19 20-46
[7]  
Nosek BA(2014)Focused deterrence strategies and crime control: An updated systematic review and meta-analysis of the empirical evidence British Journal of Criminology 54 1023-1046
[8]  
Wagenmakers E-J(2018)Two-way fixed effects estimators with heterogeneous treatment effects Criminology & Public Policy 17 205-250
[9]  
Berk R(2020)Police violence and citizen crime reporting in the black community American Economic Review 110 2964-96
[10]  
Bollen KA(2016)Endogenous selection bias: The problem of conditioning on a collider variable American Sociological Review 81 857-876