Canadian Policing Research Catalogue

Under scrutiny : the effect of consent decrees on the representation of women in sworn law enforcement / Kim Lonsway, Patricia Aguirre, Nicole Gilliams, Ashley Likens, Sharyn Tejani, Margaret Moore, Penny Harrington, Eleanor Smeal, Katherine Spillar.

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Location

Canadian Policing Research

Resource

e-Books

Authors

Description

1 online resource (27 pages)

Note

Authors affiliated with: National Center for Women & Policing; Feminist Majority Foundation.

Summary

"This study documents the clear positive effect that consent decrees have on the representation of women within sworn law enforcement. The findings are therefore consistent with existing research indicating that affirmative action programs have significantly increased the representation of sworn women. For example, Susan Martin conducted a survey in 1986 with 446 police agencies. Her results confirmed that affirmative action programs substantially increased the number of sworn women, and this was particularly pronounced for those programs that were court-ordered rather than voluntary. Specifically, agencies with consent decrees had 10.1% female officers, compared with 8.3% in departments with voluntary affirmative action programs and 6.1% in departments without any affirmative action policy. Affirmative action programs also significantly increased the percentage of female applicants and the proportion of female applicants who were selected to be recruits. Although affirmative action programs therefore had a very positive effect on the number of women police officers, no statistically significant effect was seen on their promotion to higher levels within the organization".--Page 7.

Subject

Online Access

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