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Session Submission Type: Regular Session
This panel brings together scholarship that expands the boundaries of how, where, and through what mechanisms police legitimacy is produced and contested. Whether through challenges to prosecutorial data transparency, marine law enforcement, or procedural justice, each study reveals legal infrastructures that inform the legitimacy of law enforcement institutions.
Cooperation with Police and Compliance with Laws in Ghana: A Test of Two Models of Policing - Dennis Sarpong, Arizona State University; Vincent de Paul Kanwetuu, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology
Navigating challenges in data quality with transparency-minded prosecutors - Dominic Testino, Measures for Justice Institute; Rhianna Hayes, Measures for Justice Institute
Sardine Wardens? Police of the Sea? Understanding Law Enforcement in Maine’s Coastal Fisheries - Michael Rocque, Bates College
The Ecology of Violence: Police Use of Force, Legal Cynicism and Neighborhood Crime in Seattle, Washington - Ali Shodunke, The Pennsylvania State University