Abstract:This article describes a study on the value patterns of a midwestern municipal police force, and compares police values with those of representative samples of black and white Americans. The data on police values support the hypotheses that personality factors and social backgrounds are more important than occupational socialization in understanding police value systems. The police values are not necessarily representative of American value patterns, either black or white, suggesting that either more different… Show more
“…Rokeach, Miller, and Synder (1971) found that police officers, prior to entering the force, held similar values to those they displayed later in their careers. Crank and Caldero (1999) substantively expanded on this point of view in research demonstrating that police officer values changed little over time, including pre-and post-entry into the force.…”
Section: Implications For the Policing Literaturesupporting
“…Rokeach, Miller, and Synder (1971) found that police officers, prior to entering the force, held similar values to those they displayed later in their careers. Crank and Caldero (1999) substantively expanded on this point of view in research demonstrating that police officer values changed little over time, including pre-and post-entry into the force.…”
Section: Implications For the Policing Literaturesupporting
“…Second, the only empirical research they brought to bear on the measurement of the noble cause was Rokeach's value survey (Rokeach, Miller, & Snyder, 1971). This value survey has shown an alignment of the police on particular value clusters.…”
Section: The Noble Cause In Contemporary Researchmentioning
“…Characteristics that have been defined as common for police officers are attributes such as courage, authoritarianism, cynicism and aggression (Lefkowitz 1975, Twersky-Glasner 2005, as well as suspicion, conventionality and isolation (Evans et al 1992, Rokeach et al 1971, Skolnick 1994, Vastola 1978. Balch (1972) also highlights authoritarianism as an important element of police officers" personalities.…”
Section: Definition Of Police Personalitymentioning
The issue of whether police officers possess certain personality characteristics that make them unique has been the subject of an extensive line of research. Several researchers have found evidence of a "police personality", while other researchers have failed to detect personality differences between the police and the public. Making the picture even more complex, some researchers have found that officers differ from each other in terms of job performance, and that actual personality differences predict such variations. This study therefore examines personality differences between the police and the public by using the Big Five taxonomy of personality. It also explores differences in officers" job performance, using preferences for ways of resolving conflict situations as the job performance criterion. The study found support for the existence of a police personality. It also found differences in terms of preferences for conflict resolution tactics. Personality was only weakly related to such differences.
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