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Journal Article

Citation

Fedina L, Backes BL, Jun HJ, DeVylder J, Barth RP. Policing (Bradford) 2019; 42(5): 901-916.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/PIJPSM-04-2019-0046

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE The purpose of this paper is to understand the relationship among police legitimacy/trust and experiences of intimate partner violence (IPV), including victims' decisions to report IPV to police and police responses to IPV.

DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH Data were drawn from the 2017 Survey of Police-Public Encounters II - a cross-sectional, general population survey of adults from New York City and Baltimore (n=1,000). Regression analyses were used to examine associations among police legitimacy/trust, IPV exposure, police reporting of IPV, and perceived police responses to IPV and interaction effects.

FINDINGS Higher levels of IPV exposure were significantly associated with lower levels of police legitimacy/trust; however, this relationship was stronger among African-American participants than non-African-American participants. Higher levels of police legitimacy/trust were significantly associated with more positive police responses to IPV and this relationship was stronger among heterosexual participants than sexual minority participants. Research limitations/implications Future research should examine prospective relationships to understand causal mechanisms linking individual perceptions of police legitimacy/trust, experiences with IPV and victims' interactions with police. Practical implications Low levels of legitimacy/trust between police and citizens may result, in part, if police are engaged in negative or inadequate responses to reports of IPV. Police-social work partnerships can enhance effective police responses to IPV, particularly to racial/ethnic and sexual minority individuals.

ORIGINALITY/VALUE This study provides empirical evidence linking police legitimacy/trust to the experiences of IPV and perceived police responses to reports of IPV, including important group differences among victims based on race/ethnicity and sexual orientation.


Language: en

Keywords

Domestic violence; Police legitimacy; Police–community relations; Trust in police

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