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Women and policing in the South Pacific: A pathway towards gender-inclusive organizational reform

Authors :
Bull, Melissa
Watson, Danielle
Amin, Sara
Carrington, Kerry
Bull, Melissa
Watson, Danielle
Amin, Sara
Carrington, Kerry
Source :
Police Practice and Research
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Scholars have been critical of the gender biased nature of policing, and its effects on service delivery. They highlight how law enforcement is male dominated, and how this impacts negatively on women as offenders and victims of crime. Such criticisms have mobilised international and national institutional support for more gender equitable representation in policing agencies. A growing body of research has addressed the impact of increasing the numbers of women police, and how this might lead to more sympathetic and less gender prejudicial policing. This paper reports on a study commissioned by the Tuvalu Police Service that explored public perceptions of service delivery. Our analysis spotlights perceptions about women in policing, attitudes in relation to preferred officer-gender in calls for service and views on increasing the number of women employed as police. The findings identified clear support for increasing the number of women police, but ambiguous sentiments in relation to the types of roles female officers could perform. Closer analysis of qualitative data, however, revealed an appreciation of the strengths of women police who, in a context characterised by regulatory pluralism, were able to address the needs of female victims and offenders in ways that male officers could not.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Police Practice and Research
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1255560128
Document Type :
Electronic Resource