Measuring police‐community co‐production: Trade‐offs in two observational approaches
Abstract
A popular practice of community‐policing is police attendance at community meetings. Given the prevalence of this co‐productive activity, research needs to understand the potential variation in police‐community interactions occurring in or reported in community meetings. Developing reliable and valid measurement techniques to characterize interactions occurring at police‐community meetings has strategic planning value for police and community practitioners and scholarly theoretical value. Two observational coding (issue‐specific and global) and sampling (continuous and periodic) strategies are contrasted. Methodological trade‐offs regarding validity, utility, strategic planning value, and theory‐testing value of the different methods are detailed. It is concluded that global measures of police‐community interactions and periodic observations of police‐community meetings can help with understanding variation in police‐community meetings and implementation effectiveness of co‐productive strategies. Yet, to validly understand the cause and effects of police‐community co‐production on building community and public safety, issue‐specific coding strategies and continuous observations of community meetings are necessary.
Keywords
Citation
Renauer, B.C., Duffee, D.E. and Scott, J.D. (2003), "Measuring police‐community co‐production: Trade‐offs in two observational approaches", Policing: An International Journal, Vol. 26 No. 1, pp. 9-28. https://doi.org/10.1108/13639510310460279
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited