Skip to main content
Journal cover image

Input without Influence: The Silence and Scripts of Police and Community Relations

Publication ,  Journal Article
Cheng, T
Published in: Social Problems
February 1, 2020

Since its establishment in 1993, the Department of Justice's Office of Community-Oriented Policing Services has invested $14 billion into local police departments' efforts to improve community relations. Yet in 2015, the public's confidence in police reached its lowest point since 1993. Drawing on seven years of Chicago Police Board meeting transcripts, this article identifies one mechanism why, despite police investment, community relations can fail to improve. While community meetings where residents present complaints are envisioned as enhancing citizen voice, police replied to 74 percent of complaints with literal silence. When police were not silent, both police and residents repeated identifiable scripts-defined as stylized narratives based on generalized knowledge from typical events-that reflected divergent conceptualizations of community issues. Police use of silence and scripts are examples of "perfunctory policing," where officers superficially comply with procedural requirements of a program or practice, but resist substantive changes in performance-leaving residents to shoulder the consequences of police inaction. As local jurisdictions invest more into closing the gap between the government and public, insufficient analysis into how initiatives are implemented can legitimize decision-making processes that reinforce the pre-existing social order, rendering community interactions more procedurally symbolic than substantively productive.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Social Problems

DOI

EISSN

1533-8533

ISSN

0037-7791

Publication Date

February 1, 2020

Volume

67

Issue

1

Start / End Page

171 / 189

Related Subject Headings

  • Sociology
  • 4410 Sociology
  • 3507 Strategy, management and organisational behaviour
  • 1608 Sociology
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Cheng, T. (2020). Input without Influence: The Silence and Scripts of Police and Community Relations. Social Problems, 67(1), 171–189. https://doi.org/10.1093/socpro/spz007
Cheng, T. “Input without Influence: The Silence and Scripts of Police and Community Relations.” Social Problems 67, no. 1 (February 1, 2020): 171–89. https://doi.org/10.1093/socpro/spz007.
Cheng, T. “Input without Influence: The Silence and Scripts of Police and Community Relations.” Social Problems, vol. 67, no. 1, Feb. 2020, pp. 171–89. Scopus, doi:10.1093/socpro/spz007.
Cheng T. Input without Influence: The Silence and Scripts of Police and Community Relations. Social Problems. 2020 Feb 1;67(1):171–189.
Journal cover image

Published In

Social Problems

DOI

EISSN

1533-8533

ISSN

0037-7791

Publication Date

February 1, 2020

Volume

67

Issue

1

Start / End Page

171 / 189

Related Subject Headings

  • Sociology
  • 4410 Sociology
  • 3507 Strategy, management and organisational behaviour
  • 1608 Sociology