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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page research paper on the influence of police subculture. The writer argues that police subculture has a tremendous influence over whether or not police officers adhere to standards of moral and professional conduct and that such culture tend to be self-perpetuating, either for good or ill effects. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khpolcul.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
an extremely persuasive influence over the conduct of police officers, particularly towards women and people of color. While mainstream culture presents a paradigm of racial tolerance and an appreciation
for diversity, this can be counter-acted by a police subculture that presents the people of the communities that the police serve as the "enemy" and their daily work routine as
a "war." Police culture is very power-based and paramilitary in its structure (Pruitt 128). Therefore, it is not unusual for older police officers to indoctrinate younger recruits to the
"realities " of police work in a manner that passes on cultural bias and behaviors that constitute misconduct. While every police department will have a few "bad apples," when these
individuals are prevalent, they can constitute a culture that is detrimental to the entire department. Police culture is some departments can "compromise the ethical conduct of many police officers" (Swope
80). Citing the old clich? that a few "bad apples in a barrel can spoil the bunch. Ross Swope argues that it is police culture, the "unethical breeding environment of
the barrel," that generates the greatest difficulties in police conduct (80). Police officer do not enter law enforcement in order to "steal, extort or accept bribes;" they dont enter
the profession in order to "beat people, violate individual constitutional rights or use excessive force" (Swope 80). No one becomes a police officer with the intention already in place
that he or she will plant evidence or frame an innocent individual (Swope 80). Yet, many police officers do commit such misconduct because their ethics become corrupted by a
police culture that presents these actions as normal and necessary (Swope 80). Research indicates that police misconduct is directly connected to the prevalence of certain minority groups within a given
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