TY - JOUR PY - 2015// TI - Variable links within perceived police legitimacy? Fairness and effectiveness across races and places JO - Social science research A1 - Taylor, Ralph B. A1 - Wyant, Brian R. A1 - Lockwood, Brian SP - 234 EP - 248 VL - 49 IS - N2 - This work examines connections between two threads of community residents' perceptions of local police legitimacy, effectiveness and procedural fairness, and how those links depend on race, place, and race/place combinations. Previous works have connected these two threads, but have failed (a) to explore the variability of that connection by race, place, and race/place combinations across communities spanning the urban to suburban to rural continuum or (b) to model mutual influence. An extension of the group position thesis and work on minority views of police practices suggest how these variations might be patterned. Data were derived from a 2003 probability-based sampling survey of household respondents across Pennsylvania (n = 1289). Generalized confirmatory factor analysis models built procedural fairness and effectiveness indices for four groups: whites in urban core counties, non-whites in urban core counties, whites in non-urban core counties, and non-whites in non-urban core counties. Non-recursive structural equation models revealed variable impacts of perceived police effectiveness on perceived police fairness and, to a lesser extent, of fairness on effectiveness. Implications for a more structurally and contextually aware understanding of links in police legitimacy models are developed.

LA - en SN - 0049-089X UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2014.08.004 ID - ref1 ER -