Getting to know your boys and girls in blue could reduce crime rates

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US researchers say a bit of information about our local police officers shared around the neighbourhood might reduce crime rates. They found that people's sense of anonymity doesn't just depend on what people know about us, but also what we know about them. The researchers provided information on police officers (such as their favourite food, sports team, and hobbies) to 39 neighbourhoods in New York, and compared how they perceived what the officers knew about them to a group of 30 neighbourhoods that were not provided any officer-info. The authors estimated an approximately 5-7 per cent reduction in crime in the neighbourhoods that received the information relative to the group that did not. The authors suggest that residents who had more information about local officers may have believed officers would be more aware of their illegal activity, therefore reducing their criminal behaviour.

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From: Springer Nature

Familiarity with police officers could reduce crime 

Providing residents with information about their neighbourhood police officers may reduce crime rates, suggests a Nature paper. The combined results from laboratory and field studies suggest that our sense of anonymity depends not only on what people know about us, but also on what we know about them.

People often assume that their social ties with others are symmetrical, but that is not always the case. Anuj Shah and Michael LaForest use standard lab-based psychological studies to show that learning more about others might make us believe they know more about us, too. We might feel less anonymous, and believe that our thoughts and behaviours could seem more obvious to others than they actually are. Previous research suggests that perceived anonymity can increase dishonest or harmful behaviour, but if people believe that others know more about them, and are more attuned to their actions, this could reduce some negative behavioural consequences of anonymity.

To understand how the social asymmetries that they found in the lab might affect perceptions and actions, the authors selected 69 public housing developments in New York City. Thirty-nine of these were provided with information about neighbourhood police officers (such as their favourite food, sports teams and hobbies); the remaining 30 were used as a control, and not provided with any interventions. They then surveyed 1,858 residents to assess their perceptions of what officers knew about them, and how likely they thought it was that an officer would know whether they committed a crime. For the first three months after the intervention, the authors estimated an approximately 5–7% reduction in crime in the neighbourhoods that received the information relative to those that did not, a similar reduction to that of increasing police presence in a given area.

The authors suggest that residents who had more information about local officers may have believed officers would be more aware of their illegal activity, therefore reducing their criminal behaviour. This could help to explain why door-to-door visits from officers are more effective at reducing crime than other components of community policing, such as neighbourhood watches or storefront officers. Although broader reforms are necessary to reduce disparities and increase trust in policing, one way to reduce crime could be to provide the community with more information about neighbourhood officers, the authors argue.

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Nature
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
Funder: This research was supported by the National Institute of Justice (award number 2013-R2-CX-0006)
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