Policing Sex Crimes represents a significant and much needed contribution to the research on police investigation. With access to data from 70 interviews, Spencer and Ricciardelli offer a unique opportunity to peer behind the glamorous images of such work in mainstream media, revealing instead a complex picture of how both investigators and victims are often forced to navigate incredibly difficult legal, emotional and psychological terrain.
- Laura Huey, Western University,
In Policing Sex Crimes, Professors Spencer and Ricciardelli significantly advance our understanding of an aspect of police work that has received insufficient attention. Drawing upon an impressive cross-Canada sample of interviews with officers working in sex crimes units, the authors shine a light on such topics as the increasingly technologized aspect of policing, the ‘victim support’ role provided by officers, and the moral taint surrounding ‘sex crimes’ officers. The concluding chapter is noteworthy for its consideration of this type of policing as a form of ‘dirty work’ that officers undertake on behalf of a society that is eager to ‘do something’ about sex crimes, but which is happy to have unseen others engage in the distasteful, shocking, and psychologically traumatizing realities of such work.
- Kevin D. Haggerty, Killam Laureate, Canada Research Chair, University of Alberta,
Unique in its approach, Policing Sex Crimes probes the investigations of sex crimes from the perspectives of investigators.
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Sex Crimes, Law, and Technology
Chapter 3. ‘This Isn’t Your Father’s Police Force’: Digital Evidence in Sex Crime Investigations and the Need for Digital Policing
Chapter 4. “Society Wants to See a True Victim”: Police Interpretations of Victims of Sexual Violence
Chapter 5. Collaborative Policing and Networked Responses to Victims of Sex Crimes
Chapter 6. Cynicism, Dirty Work, and Policing Sex Crimes
Chapter 7. Conclusion
References
About the Authors
Crime and safety continue to be among the top issues facing the global world and the discipline of applied criminology addresses those issues. The Applied Criminology across the Globe series, is designed to address the ever-growing need for current and accurate information on a variety of subjects as related to applied criminology. The books in this series provide the readers with monographs that are able to inform and educate individuals on crime and criminal behaviors.
Series Editor: Kimberly A. McCabe
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Dale Spencer is associate professor and Faculty of Public Affairs' Research Excellence Chair in the Department of Law and Legal Studies at Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Rosemary Ricciardelli is professor (PhD, Sociology) in the School of Maritime Studies and Research Chair in Safety, Security, and Wellness, at Memorial University of Newfoundland's Fisheries and Maritime Institute.