TY - BOOK AU - McCluskey,John D. TI - Police requests for compliance: coercive and procedurally just tactics T2 - Criminal justice SN - 1593320450 AV - HV8080.P2 M33 2003eb U1 - 363.2/3 22 PY - 2003/// CY - New York PB - LFB Scholarly Pub. KW - Police patrol KW - Police-community relations KW - Compliance KW - Cooperative Behavior KW - Patrouille policière KW - Relations police-collectivité KW - Complaisance KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE KW - Political Freedom & Security KW - Law Enforcement KW - bisacsh KW - fast KW - Samfundsvidenskab KW - Sociologi KW - Electronic book KW - Electronic books KW - gtlm N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 195-207) and index; Introduction -- Chap. 1. Explaining compliance -- Chap. 2. Procedural justice and compliance -- Chap. 3. Conceptualizing and measuring compliance -- Chap. 4. Predicting compliance -- Chap. 5. Compliance requests for self-control -- Chap. 6. Requests for identification : measures and models -- Chap. 7. Conditional effects -- Chap. 8. Conclusions and future research -- Notes -- Appendix -- References -- Index N2 - Using observational data from two metropolitan police departments, McCluskey studies citizen compliance with police requests for self-control in face-to-face encounters. The central question is whether coercive tactics (e.g. commanding a suspect) or "procedurally just" tactics (e.g. giving a suspect the opportunity to tell his or her side of the situation) are more powerful in explaining citizen's decisions to comply with police requests. A series of multivariate logistic models indicate that the "justness" of police tactics has the greatest power in explaining why citizens comply with police requests for self-control UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=101782 ER -