Comparative Policing Review 2
Policing and Society volume 35 issue 4
Introduction
The underplayed importance of shocks in policing studies, Sebastian Roché & Jenny Fleming
Articles
Politicians and police in the face of democratic change in Chile and Colombia, Hugo Frühling & Antonio Frey
What has changed and why: the transformation and (de)legitimisation of post-COVID policing in Hong Kong and Taiwan, Lawrence Ka-ki Ho & Angus Siu-cheong Li
Urban disorder in democratic transitions: Ukraine’s municipal policing debates in comparative perspective, Matthew Light, Anne-Marie Singh, Aaron Erlich & Oleh Feday
Police deployment in armed conflict: a typology and multi-case application, Kristine Eck
Post-election riots and the dilemmas of democratic policing: recent experience in the United States and Brazil, David A. Sklansky
Harmful or helpful? Trust in the police after a shock: a test of (dual) expectancy disconfirmation theory, Sebastian Roché & Simon Varaine
Comparative Policing Review 1
Policing and Society volume 32 issue 3
Forward
Comparative Policing Review, Michael Tonry
Preface
Why study policing comparatively? Wesley G. Skogan
Articles
Cross-national research. A new frontier for police studies, Sebastian Roché and Jenny Fleming
Police worker politics in India, Brasil, and beyond, Beatrice Jauregui
Police, Non-State Actors, and Political Legitimacy in Central America, José Miguel Cruz
Trust in the Police and the Militarization of Law Enforcement in Latin America, Hung-En Sung, Joel Capellan and Bryce Barthuly
How institutional contexts shape police-adolescent encounters. A study of France and Germany, Dietrich Oberwittler and Sebastian Roché
Legitimacy and Cooperation with the Police: Examining Empirical Relationship Using Data from Africa, Francis D. Boateng, Daniel K. Pryce and Gassan Abess
The inevitable fallibility of policing, Tim Newburn