Your First Five Crime Studies of January 11
Today's crime studies include work on police legitimacy
Your First Five is a daily (M-F) series that publishes a curated selection of recent research published in fields relevant to crime and justice. Each post contains links to five new studies that I hope might inspire, augment, or otherwise enhance your work explaining crime. Your First Five crime studies of the day is published each weekday at about 7 a.m., E.S.T.
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These new criminology and criminal justice studies were published recently by journals I monitor.
1. A police-clinician co-response team to people with mental illness in a suburban-rural community: a randomized controlled trial, published in Journal of Experimental Criminology. (Restricted access)
2. Police legitimacy in urban, suburban and rural settings: a study in Slovenia, published in Policing: An International Journal. (Restricted access)
3. Building career capital in policing in Australia through women's leadership programmes, published in Policing: An International Journal. (Restricted access)
4. The parole dossier and its negative impacts on prisoner identity, published in Criminology & Criminal Justice. (Open access)
5. Understanding how law enforcement agencies share information in an intelligence-led environment: how operational context influences different approaches, published in Policing: An International Journal. (Restricted access)
I might cover some of these studies further in Understanding Crime. If one sounds interesting or important, let me know in the comments. Right now, I'm considering number 2.