
%0 Journal Article
%T Characterizing perceived police violence: implications for public health
%J American journal of public health
%D 2004
%A Krieger, Nancy
%A Gruskin, Sofia
%A Moore, Linda
%A Cooper, Holly
%V 94
%N 7
%P 1109-1118
%X Despite growing recognition of violence's health consequences and the World Health Organization's recent classification of police officers' excessive use of force as a form of violence, public health investigators have produced scant research characterizing police-perpetrated abuse. Using qualitative data from a study of a police drug crackdown in 2000 in 1 New York City police precinct, we explored 40 injection drug using and 25 non-drug using precinct residents' perceptions of and experiences with police-perpetrated abuse. Participants, particularly injection drug users and non-drug using men, reported police physical, psychological, and sexual violence and neglect; they often associated this abuse with crackdown-related tactics and perceived officer prejudice. We recommend that public health research address the prevalence, nature, and public health implications of police violence.
%G 
%I American Public Health Association
%@ 0090-0036
%U http://dx.doi.org/