Journal
POLICING-A JOURNAL OF POLICY AND PRACTICE
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 950-964Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/police/paaa059
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- School of Criminology and Criminal Justice
- Center for Violence Prevention and Community Solutions
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Through qualitative coding and descriptive statistics, it was found that nearly 60% of respondents expressed fear of future police contact for individuals with ASD. Respondents were mainly concerned about police misunderstanding behaviors common among individuals with ASD, ineffective communication between individuals with ASD and police, and the potential for individuals with ASD to exhibit aggressive behaviors during police contact.
Using data from a survey of parents, guardians, caregivers, and professionals, we couple qualitative coding with descriptive statistics to show how common it is for respondents to fear future police contact for the individual with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in the respondents' lives and what inspires that fear. Nearly, 60% of respondents were reported being fearful of future police contact. Respondents characterized their fear in the following ways: the potential for police officers to misunderstand behaviours common amongst individuals with ASD generally and see those behaviours as non-compliance, ineffective, or difficult communication with minimally individuals with ASD and the emergence of aggressive behaviours from individuals with ASD during police contact. Respondents also expressed concern about the potential for police misuse of force. We conclude by discussing the ramifications of fear of police contact for police training as well as parents, caregivers, and individuals with ASD.
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