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Journal Article

Citation

Kim DY, Phillips SW, Bishopp SA. Policing (Bradford) 2021; 45(2): 252-265.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/PIJPSM-08-2021-0105

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE The present study examines a range of police force on the continuum (firearms, TASER/chemical spray and physical force) to see whether they are associated with individual (subject and officer), situational and/or neighborhood factors.

DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH A partial proportional odds model is used to analyze police use of force data from 2003 to 2016 in Dallas. Independent variables are allowed for varying effects across the different cumulative dichotomizations of the dependent variable (firearms vs TASER/chemical spray and physical force and firearms and TASER/chemical spray vs physical force).

FINDINGS Most officer demographic and situational factors are consistently significant across the cumulative dichotomizations of police force. In addition, suspect race/ethnicity (Hispanic) and violent crime rates play significant roles when officers make decisions to use firearms, as opposed to TASER/chemical spray and physical force. Overall, situational variables (subject gun possession and contact types) play greater roles than other variables in affecting police use of force.

ORIGINALITY/VALUE Despite the large body of police use of force research, little to no research has used the partial proportional odds model to examine the ordinal nature of police force from physical to intermediate to deadly force. The current findings can provide important implications for policy and research.


Language: en

Keywords

Decision-making; Law enforcement; Partial proportional odds model; Police use of force

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