4.3 Article

American Policing and the Danger Imperative

Journal

LAW & SOCIETY REVIEW
Volume 55, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/lasr.12526

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Justice Collaboratory at the Yale Law School
  2. Macarthur Foundation [15-108050-000-USP]

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Despite the long-term declines in violent victimization of U.S. police officers, the danger of police work continues to influence police socialization, culture, and behavior. Police officers engage in policy-compliant and policy-deviant behaviors due to the perception mediated through the danger imperative, with policy-deviant behaviors such as unauthorized high-speed driving leading to catastrophic car accidents. These seemingly mundane policy deviant behaviors reflect underlying assumptions within police culture that contribute to damaging public wellbeing and perpetuating inequalities in U.S. policing.
In spite of long-term declines in the violent victimization of U.S. police officers, the danger of police work continues to structure police socialization, culture, and behavior. Existing research, though attentive to police behavior and deviance that negatively affects the public, analytically ignores how the danger of policing engenders officer behavior that harms police themselves. Drawing on ethnographic observations and interviews in three U.S. police departments, this article describes how police are informally and formally socialized into the danger imperative-a cultural frame that emphasizes violence and the need for officer safety-and its effect on officer behavior. As a result of perception mediated through the danger imperative, officers engage in policy-compliant and policy-deviant behaviors to protect themselves from violence. Unfortunately, policy-deviant behaviors such as unauthorized highspeed driving and not wearing a seatbelt, though justified in the name of safety, lead to catastrophic car accidents that injure and kill both police and members of the public. This article concludes with discussion of how seemingly mundane policy deviant behaviors are a reflection of assumptions within police culture that undergird police practices that damage public wellbeing and perpetuate boarder inequalities in U.S. policing.

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