000 01960pab a2200193 454500
008 180718b2013 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aDrakulich, Kevin M.
245 _aThe role of perceptions of the police on informal social control: Implications for the racial stratification of crime and control crime
260 _c2013
300 _ap.383-407.
362 _aAug
520 _aRecent research has established the importance of informal social control to a variety of aspects of neighborhood life, including the prevalence of crime. This work has described informal social control as rooted in a neighborhood's structural and social context, but has less frequently explored the interconnections between informal and formal social control efforts. Drawing on data from Seattle, this article suggests that perceptions of formal social controlラspecifically perceptions of police procedural injustice and police efficacyラdirectly influence both individual evaluations of informal social control efforts as well as neighborhood capacities for informal social control. We suggest a pragmatic mechanism to explain this relationshipラthat low evaluations of the police will influence perceptions of the effectiveness of and costs associated with informal social control effortsラand we control for alternative cultural explanations related to the desirability of social control. Most strikingly, we find that strong racial disparities in faith in the police help explain why neighborhoods with larger race-ethnic minority populations have lower capacities for informal social control. We conclude with a discussion of emerging accounts of the role of culture in local organizational processes and of the larger social implications of the race-ethnic stratification of perceptions of the police. - Rep
650 _aCrime
650 _aPolice
700 _aCrutchfield, Robert D.
773 _aSocial Problems
908 _aN
909 _a100823
999 _c100822
_d100822