In response to recent highly publicized violent encounters between the police and the public, there has been a significant increase in research on police use of force and citizen's perceptions of the police. Relatively little empirical research, though, has addressed the role of the media in shaping public perceptions of police use of force. This article helps fill this void by examining the impact of a controversial, violent arrest captured on videotape by a local news team and widely broadcast on local television in Cincinnati. Using the Greater Cincinnati Survey, bivariate and multivariate analyses are employed to examine variations in perceptions of the reasonableness of the force used by police. Findings indicate that the videotaped arrest had a negative impact on citizens' perceptions of force used by police during arrest situations, but that the effect was substantially greater among non-Caucasians. Furthermore, over a ten-year period, non-Caucasians were consistently more likely than Caucasians to believe police used force excessively. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.
机构:
Indiana State Univ, Criminol & Criminal Justice Psychol, Terre Haute, IN 47809 USA
Indiana State Univ, Govt Publicat, Terre Haute, IN 47809 USAIndiana State Univ, Criminol & Criminal Justice Psychol, Terre Haute, IN 47809 USA
机构:
Merrimack Coll, Criminol & Criminal Justice, 315 Turnpike St, N Andover, MA 01845 USAMerrimack Coll, Criminol & Criminal Justice, 315 Turnpike St, N Andover, MA 01845 USA
Cassino, Peter P.
Demir, Mustafa
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John Jay Coll Criminal Justice, Law Police Sci & Criminal Justice Adm, 524 W 59th St, New York, NY 10019 USAMerrimack Coll, Criminol & Criminal Justice, 315 Turnpike St, N Andover, MA 01845 USA