Kenneth Bolton Jr’s research while affiliated with Southeastern Louisiana University and other places

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Publications (1)


Shared perceptions: Black officers discuss continuing barriers in policing
  • Article

September 2003

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248 Reads

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58 Citations

Policing An International Journal

Kenneth Bolton Jr

Informed by the experiential-racism theoretical approach, which maintains that racism must be analyzed as a process that is manifested in multiple relations and situations in everyday life, interviews with 50 male and female black police officers in a southern state are drawn upon to analyze the impact race has on policing. Accounts demonstrate in considerable detail a shared perception of the continuing attitudinal and institutional dimensions of racism that impedes full participation in law enforcement agencies. Training, evaluation, discipline, assignment and promotion are discussed as processes within police agencies felt to be impacted by race. The conclusion is promoted that racism is persistent in agencies to the extent that white officers disproportionately occupy positions of authority with unfettered subjective discretion and to the extent there are few black officers relative to white officers. As an exploratory examination of the shared experiences and perceptions of black officers, findings should be further tested empirically.

Citations (1)


... Beyond the initial hurdle of enticing women to apply, their on-the-job experiences can push them out. Policewomen have long reported difficulty gaining acceptance, and many experience discrimination related to institutional racism and sexism (Bolton, 2003;Cunningham & Ramshaw, 2020;Hassell & Brandl, 2009;Rabe-Hemp, 2009). Some may code-switch to cope with a culture where femininity indicates weakness (Chan et al., 2010;Hassell & Brandl, 2009;Rabe-Hemp, 2009). ...

Reference:

Navigating Entry: The Role of Exposure and Career Fit Negotiation in Women’s Pathways to Policing in the United States
Shared perceptions: Black officers discuss continuing barriers in policing
  • Citing Article
  • September 2003

Policing An International Journal