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Home Research Topics Other Topics Occupational Groups Police
Pew Research CenterSeptember 24, 2018
1. Police culture

About half of black officers say whites are treated better than minorities in assignments and promotions

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About half of black officers say whites are treated better than minorities in assignments and promotions

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1. Police culture
White officers differ from blacks and Hispanics over when it’s appropriate to break department rules
About six-in-ten officers say their work nearly always or often makes them feel proud
Administrators about twice as likely as rank-and-file officers to have participated in a community event in the past month
White and Hispanic officers, more than blacks, report being verbally abused by community members
For many officers, being thanked and verbally abused are commonplace
Male officers, whites more likely to have fired service weapon on duty
Men, newer officers more likely to report violent encounters with resistant suspects
Younger officers worry more often about their physical safety
White officers less likely than other groups to say accountability a motive
Race and rank linked to feelings about police work
Do Americans understand the challenges police face on the job?
Some officers say tough, aggressive tactics are needed with some people in some neighborhoods
Most officers say protests mainly motivated by bias toward police
Most white, Latino officers say fatal encounters between blacks and police are isolated incidents; majority of black officers disagree
Impact of fatal incidents involving blacks felt more by large departments than by small agencies
Roughly two-thirds of officers say they favor the use of body cameras
About half say disciplinary process in their department is fair
Most officers say their department has too few officers to police the community
Majority of full-time officers are in agencies with at least 100 officers
White officers more likely than black officers to have had a physical altercation with a suspect
The dual nature of police work: For officers, emotions and experiences are often in conflict
Police, public divided by race over whether attaining equality requires more changes
Majority of police say fatal police-black encounters are isolated incidents; majority of the public says they point to a bigger problem
Officers say fatal encounters between police and blacks have made policing harder
White officers differ from blacks and Hispanics over when it’s appropriate to break department rules
Race and rank linked to feelings about police work
About six-in-ten officers say their work nearly always or often makes them feel proud
Administrators about twice as likely as rank-and-file officers to have participated in a community event in the past month
White and Hispanic officers, more than blacks, report being verbally abused by community members
For many officers, being thanked and verbally abused are commonplace
Most police say the public doesn’t understand the risks they face
Male officers, whites more likely to have fired service weapon on duty
Men, newer officers more likely to report violent encounters with resistant suspects
Younger officers worry more often about their physical safety
About six-in-ten police officers see themselves as protectors and enforcers
About four-in-ten officers say they are formally or informally expected to meet a certain number of arrests or tickets
Most officers favor a requirement to intervene when another officer is about to use unnecessary force
More police worry their fellow officers will not act quickly enough than worry they will act too quickly
About a third of officers say, when put to the test, use-of-force guidelines in their department are very useful
Officers in larger departments are more likely to say their use-of-force guidelines are too restrictive
Officers in large agencies less likely to say their department has trained and equipped them very well
About four-in-ten officers say their department has done very well in training them adequately for their job
Most officers say their department has too few officers to police the community
Officers in smaller agencies more likely to agree that their agency’s disciplinary process is fair
For minor mistakes, more officers today agree coaching is used vs. punishment
Officers’ assessments of key aspects of the disciplinary process are mixed
For assignments and promotions, about four-in-ten female officers say men are treated better than women
In 2013, racial and ethnic minorities accounted for about a quarter of the police force and women made up about one-in-eight police officers
About half of black officers say whites are treated better than minorities in assignments and promotions
PSDT_01.11.17.police 02 14

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