In Search of Police Legitimacy: Territoriality, Isomorphism, and Changes in Policing Practices

In Search of Police Legitimacy: Territoriality, Isomorphism, and Changes in Policing Practices
Jonathon A. Cooper
February 2014

ISBN-13:  978-1-59332-724-8 / Hardcover
Dimensions:  5.5 x 8.5 / xviii, 214 pages

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Description

Cooper answers two questions: why do police precincts look similar, despite being situated in very different environments? And, why do police engage in behavior that does not result in crime control? These two questions are closely related. Drawing from institutional theory and employing spatial analytic techniques, Cooper finds that certain police precincts unduly influence the behavior of neighboring precincts. In the language of institutional theory, this is sovereign isomorphism: precincts behave similarly because they see other precincts as leaders. Such isomorphism results in behavior that does not reduce crime because the borrowed behavior has no connection with the precinct’s immediate environment. These findings hold great potential for inducing organizational change by tapping into the strategic power of such sovereign precincts.

About the Author

Jonathon A. Cooper is an assistant professor of criminology at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Primarily a policing scholar, his focus is on policing organizational behavior and theory. A member of the American Society of Criminology and the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, he has for several years taught policing courses at the university level and worked with several law enforcement agencies and community groups in problem oriented and total quality management projects.

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