Policing Under Fire: Ethnic Conflict and Police-Community Relations in Northern Ireland

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State University of New York Press, Dec 5, 1994 - Social Science - 350 pages
This book examines police-community relations in an ethnically divided society, focusing on the attitudes and experiences of the Catholic minority and the Protestant majority, and the lower-class and middle-class sections of those populations. These groups attach great importance to, but are often polarized over, issues of police accountability, the handling of complaints against the police, the legitimacy and professionalism of the police force (the Royal Ulster Constabulary), use of deadly force, and the various forms of counterinsurgency policing which is preeminent in Northern Ireland.

The study specifies the conditions under which an ethnic group's relations with the police are likely to deteriorate or improve. Comparisons to other societies make this more than a case study of Northern Ireland. It is a major contribution to the literature on policing and ethnic conflict.
 

Contents

19221968
27
Reforming the RUC
59
Police Legitimacy and Professionalism
83
Fighting Crime and Insurgency
127
Police Accountability
175
IMPROVING POLICECOMMUNITY
225
Conclusion
279
Endnotes
297
Community Interviewees
335
Copyright

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About the author (1994)

Ronald Weitzer is Associate Professor of Sociology at George Washington University.

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