Nordisk Politiforskning (Jan 2018)

Police Research Methodology:

  • Tobias Kammersgaard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18261/issn.1894-8693-2018-02-04
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
pp. 141 – 156

Abstract

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Abstract Research on the police force has typically been occupied with seeking out commonalities between police officers rather than differences. This has amounted to a vast volume of literature on the shared occupational culture of police officers that has pointed to several problematic aspects of policing. However, in this paper, I argue for the value of studying individual police officers who are doing things differently from their colleagues as a method for actually engaging with these problematic aspects. To demonstrate the viability of this methodological approach to police research, I draw on an encounter with a particular police officer from my own empirical work. I argue that conducting case studies of such police officers and describing their practices and attitudes can be a valuable contribution to the development of better and more socially just policing. These case studies of how things can be done differently can aid in imagining new and better police practices.

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