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A New Canteen Culture: The Potential to Use Social Media as Evidence in Policing

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A New Canteen Culture: The Potential to Use Social Media as Evidence in Policing. / Hesketh, Ian; Williams, Emma.
In: Policing: Journal of Policy and Practice, Vol. 11, No. 3, 09.2017, p. 346-355.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hesketh, I & Williams, E 2017, 'A New Canteen Culture: The Potential to Use Social Media as Evidence in Policing', Policing: Journal of Policy and Practice, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 346-355. https://doi.org/10.1093/police/pax025

APA

Vancouver

Hesketh I, Williams E. A New Canteen Culture: The Potential to Use Social Media as Evidence in Policing. Policing: Journal of Policy and Practice. 2017 Sept;11(3):346-355. Epub 2017 Apr 20. doi: 10.1093/police/pax025

Author

Hesketh, Ian ; Williams, Emma. / A New Canteen Culture : The Potential to Use Social Media as Evidence in Policing. In: Policing: Journal of Policy and Practice. 2017 ; Vol. 11, No. 3. pp. 346-355.

Bibtex

@article{676a6df150a0479bb606cb4855a8f84d,
title = "A New Canteen Culture: The Potential to Use Social Media as Evidence in Policing",
abstract = "While the use of research in policing is not new (Reiner, 2010), there is currently a strong drive towards a more scientific research context to be applied to policing. This forms part of a wider professionalization agenda from the College of Policing. That said, the debate around what constitutes knowledge and evidence in policing is highly contested, as are the modes of data collection. This article proposes that the methods utilized by academic researchers should be dependent on the research question, and the nature of the phenomenon being explored. At a time when police morale is reportedly low (Hoggett et al., 2014; Weinfass, 2015) and officers are not typically willing to openly discuss their thoughts on the current state of policing, this article explores and posits a role for social media and police blogs as a method to capture practitioner experiences, thoughts, and perceptions of policing.The use of social media by police officers is experiencing a burgeoning interest throughout the service. Usage ebbs and flows in volume and popularity, and it seems this is ostensibly dependent on the interpretation of information through mainstream news channels. This {\textquoteleft}private{\textquoteright} space offers an anonymous forum for officers to voice their observations and concerns about contemporary policing issues. Notwithstanding, these forums provide researchers with a new opportunity to investigate key issues and challenges for policing (Wilkinson and Thelwall, 2012), or garner additional evidence to complement ongoing study.This article suggests that these private narratives offer both the research community and students of policing a new form of knowledge capture and creation, and one that allows insight into the changing nature of the policing sphere. This article explores and promotes both the importance and the implications of innovative practices in relation to the use of social media as police knowledge, offering two examples to support the proposition.",
author = "Ian Hesketh and Emma Williams",
year = "2017",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1093/police/pax025",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "346--355",
journal = "Policing: Journal of Policy and Practice",
issn = "1751-4512",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A New Canteen Culture

T2 - The Potential to Use Social Media as Evidence in Policing

AU - Hesketh, Ian

AU - Williams, Emma

PY - 2017/9

Y1 - 2017/9

N2 - While the use of research in policing is not new (Reiner, 2010), there is currently a strong drive towards a more scientific research context to be applied to policing. This forms part of a wider professionalization agenda from the College of Policing. That said, the debate around what constitutes knowledge and evidence in policing is highly contested, as are the modes of data collection. This article proposes that the methods utilized by academic researchers should be dependent on the research question, and the nature of the phenomenon being explored. At a time when police morale is reportedly low (Hoggett et al., 2014; Weinfass, 2015) and officers are not typically willing to openly discuss their thoughts on the current state of policing, this article explores and posits a role for social media and police blogs as a method to capture practitioner experiences, thoughts, and perceptions of policing.The use of social media by police officers is experiencing a burgeoning interest throughout the service. Usage ebbs and flows in volume and popularity, and it seems this is ostensibly dependent on the interpretation of information through mainstream news channels. This ‘private’ space offers an anonymous forum for officers to voice their observations and concerns about contemporary policing issues. Notwithstanding, these forums provide researchers with a new opportunity to investigate key issues and challenges for policing (Wilkinson and Thelwall, 2012), or garner additional evidence to complement ongoing study.This article suggests that these private narratives offer both the research community and students of policing a new form of knowledge capture and creation, and one that allows insight into the changing nature of the policing sphere. This article explores and promotes both the importance and the implications of innovative practices in relation to the use of social media as police knowledge, offering two examples to support the proposition.

AB - While the use of research in policing is not new (Reiner, 2010), there is currently a strong drive towards a more scientific research context to be applied to policing. This forms part of a wider professionalization agenda from the College of Policing. That said, the debate around what constitutes knowledge and evidence in policing is highly contested, as are the modes of data collection. This article proposes that the methods utilized by academic researchers should be dependent on the research question, and the nature of the phenomenon being explored. At a time when police morale is reportedly low (Hoggett et al., 2014; Weinfass, 2015) and officers are not typically willing to openly discuss their thoughts on the current state of policing, this article explores and posits a role for social media and police blogs as a method to capture practitioner experiences, thoughts, and perceptions of policing.The use of social media by police officers is experiencing a burgeoning interest throughout the service. Usage ebbs and flows in volume and popularity, and it seems this is ostensibly dependent on the interpretation of information through mainstream news channels. This ‘private’ space offers an anonymous forum for officers to voice their observations and concerns about contemporary policing issues. Notwithstanding, these forums provide researchers with a new opportunity to investigate key issues and challenges for policing (Wilkinson and Thelwall, 2012), or garner additional evidence to complement ongoing study.This article suggests that these private narratives offer both the research community and students of policing a new form of knowledge capture and creation, and one that allows insight into the changing nature of the policing sphere. This article explores and promotes both the importance and the implications of innovative practices in relation to the use of social media as police knowledge, offering two examples to support the proposition.

U2 - 10.1093/police/pax025

DO - 10.1093/police/pax025

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

SP - 346

EP - 355

JO - Policing: Journal of Policy and Practice

JF - Policing: Journal of Policy and Practice

SN - 1751-4512

IS - 3

ER -