Publication | Closed Access
The Sliding Scale of Snitching: A Qualitative Examination of Snitching in Three Philadelphia Communities
60
Citations
36
References
2015
Year
Community PolicingCriminal Justice ReformSystemic JusticeCrime AnalysisLawInformation ForensicsCriminal LawCyber CrimePolice PsychologyQualitative ExaminationSliding ScaleSocial SciencesCrime-as-a-serviceAfrican American StudiesWhite Young MenIn‐depth Interview StudyCybercrimeCriminological TheoryCyber Crime InvestigationCriminal JusticeThree Philadelphia CommunitiesSociologyUrban Social JusticeYoung Men
We conducted an in‐depth interview study with 77 young men in three moderate to high‐crime neighborhoods in Philadelphia to hear their stories about community violence and relations with police. In this article, we have analyzed how Latino, African‐American, and white young men experience policing and how they discuss the guidelines around cooperation with the police and what they view as snitching. Contrary to popular perception, talking to the police is not always banned in poor or high‐crime neighborhoods. Instead, the respondents present a variety of personal rules that they use to assess when cooperation is called for. We argue that the policing they experience within disadvantaged neighborhoods shapes their frame of legal cynicism, which in turn makes decisions not to cooperate with the police more likely.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1