Catalogue canadien de recherches policières

Men, women, and police excessive force : a tale of two genders : a content analysis of civil liability cases, sustained allegations and citizen complaints / Kim Lonsway, Michelle Wood, Megan Fickling, Alexandria De Leon, Margaret Moore, Penny Harrington, Eleanor Smeal, Katherine Spillar.

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Recherches policières canadienne

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Livres électroniques

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1 online resource (11 pages)

Note

Author(s) affiliated with: National Center for Women & Policing, Feminist Majority Foundation.

Résumé

Research from seven major U.S. police agencies has documented what many police and community leaders have known for a long time: women officers are substantially less likely than their male counterparts to be involved in problems of excessive force. Whether citizen complaints, sustained allegations, or civil liability payouts are used as the measure, women officers are dramatically under-represented in excessive force incidents. Given that women currently comprise 12.7% of sworn personnel in big city police agencies, we would expect that female officers in these agencies should be involved in approximately 12.7% of the citizen complaints, sustained allegations, or payouts for excessive force. Yet the data indicate that only 5% of the citizen complaints for excessive force and 2% of the sustained allegations of excessive force in large agencies involve female officers. Women also account for only 6% of the dollars that are paid out in court judgments and settlements for excessive force among these large agencies. These data are simply too striking for police executives and community leaders to ignore. They illuminate the differences in the way in which men and women perform their policing duties, and highlight the importance of hiring more women as a strategy to reduce problems with excessive force. The costs of police brutality are high, both in financial and in human terms. By better understanding the gender dimensions of excessive force, police executives and community leaders can strive toward hiring more women officers who will be less likely to engage in brutality.

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