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Police Perceptions of Irrational Unstable Behaviours and Use of Force
Authors:Laura J McTackett  Stuart D M Thomas
Institution:1.School of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences,University of Wollongong,Wollongong,Australia;2.Centre for Applied Social Research, School of Global, Urban and Social Studies,RMIT University,Melbourne,Australia;3.Southern Clinical School,Monash University,Melbourne,Australia;4.Legal Intersections Research Centre, Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts,University of Wollongong,Wollongong,Australia
Abstract:Police identification of people experiencing mental illness is usually based on either the person having an official contact history with police or through observing behavioural indicators commonly associated with mental illness during an encounter. Police have voiced concerns with their ability to identify and respond to people experiencing mental illness in a timely way and report that they commonly resort to more coercive tactical options to resolve encounters. The present study employed a mixed method design to examine 286 police use of force incidents to investigate the association between force used on and by offenders displaying irrational-unstable behavioural characteristics. The irrational-unstable offenders were two times more likely to be perceived by police to have an apparent mental disorder and almost four times more likely to have a known mental health history; one in six had an official record of contact with mental health services. There were few differences in police and offender use of force, considering force as both a categorical and a continuous variable, while incident-level comparisons suggested that police force was generally proportional to offender resistance. Implications are discussed in terms of the need to redress limitations with the traditional police approach style.
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