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Race, Policing, and Public Governance : on the other side of now.

By: Williams, Brian NContributor(s): Williams, Carmen J | Bailey, Domenick EMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: UK , Cambridge University Press, 2021. Description: 93 p. : ill .; 23 cmISBN: 978-1-108-97285-7 (pbk.)Subject(s): United States | Discrimination in law enforcement | Law EnforcementDDC classification: 363.2308900973 WIL Summary: I can't breathe ... a haunting phrase moaned at the intersection of past and present, serving as an audible supplement to the visual evidence to yet another collision of race and policing. This phrase reflects the current state of police-community relations in the United States. But, what lies on the other side of now? This Element examines this salient question in the context of excessive use of force and through the lenses of race, policing and public governance. We draw upon extant research and scholarship on representative bureaucracy, public engagement in the co-creation of public polices and the co-production of public services, and the emerging findings from studies in network science, coupled with insights from elite interviews, to offer implications for future research, the profession of policing, the public policymaking process, public management, and post-secondary institutions
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Innovation Technology Centre Library
363.2308900973 W IL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available M-91442

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I can't breathe ... a haunting phrase moaned at the intersection of past and present, serving as an audible supplement to the visual evidence to yet another collision of race and policing. This phrase reflects the current state of police-community relations in the United States. But, what lies on the other side of now? This Element examines this salient question in the context of excessive use of force and through the lenses of race, policing and public governance. We draw upon extant research and scholarship on representative bureaucracy, public engagement in the co-creation of public polices and the co-production of public services, and the emerging findings from studies in network science, coupled with insights from elite interviews, to offer implications for future research, the profession of policing, the public policymaking process, public management, and post-secondary institutions

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