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First published online April 24, 2012

Describing and Accounting for the Trends in US Protest Policing, 1960−1995

Abstract

Numerous scholars have observed a decline in more coercive police tactics used to control demonstrations since the 1960s in North America and Western Europe. Such claims, however, are largely based on rather unsystematic observation, and almost no research directly examines the evolution of protest policing during this entire period. To address this gap, the authors use semiparametric logistic regression to examine reported police presence, the use of arrests, and the use of force at 15,965 US protests occurring between 1960 and 1995. The results confirm that while there has been an absolute decline in more repressive policing behavior, the transitional process was not a monotonic, linear process. The authors also investigate the different evolutionary patterns of each type of protest policing. The authors further demonstrate that African American initiated events, government targets, social movement organization presence, protest forms, the use of force, and arrests have variable impacts on police responses over time.

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Published In

Article first published online: April 24, 2012
Issue published: August 2012

Keywords

  1. protest policing
  2. state repression
  3. social movements

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History

Published online: April 24, 2012
Issue published: August 2012

Authors

Affiliations

Patrick Rafail
Department of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA
Sarah A. Soule
Graduate School of Business, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
John D. McCarthy
Department of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA

Notes

Patrick Rafail, Department of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, 211 Oswald Tower, University Park, PA 16802, USA Email: [email protected]

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