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- catalog abstract "These data have been influential in the development of theories of police behavior. Variables in the collection supply information on the nature and context of encounters between citizens and the police. Data are included on the characteristics and roles of individuals involved in an encounter, relationships among the participants in the encounter, individuals' definitions of the situation after the arrival of police, specific police actions and manner of police behavior during the encounter, and informal characterizations by police of participants involved in the encounter. In cases where offender suspects were involved, information was collected on restraints employed, searches, interrogations, confessions, advisement of rights, booking, and other arrest processes.".
- catalog contributor b3299519.
- catalog contributor b3299520.
- catalog contributor b3299521.
- catalog created "[198-?]".
- catalog date "1966".
- catalog date "[198-?]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[198-?]".
- catalog description "Boston, Chicago, Washington, D.C.".
- catalog description "Event/transaction data.".
- catalog description "Friedrich, R.J. "The Impact of Organizational, Individual, and Situational Factors on Police Behavior." Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Political Science, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1977.".
- catalog description "LRECL data format. Each of the files in this collection is accompanied by an OSIRIS dictionary that provides variable locations and abbreviated variable labels. Codebooks are available for Part 2 and Part 5 only. Facsimiles of the original coding forms are available for Parts 1,2,3, and 5. These forms may provide enough information for some types of analyses depending on the variables of interest. Several of the variables in these files were coded as OSIRIS "multiple response" variables. When a program such as SPSS translates the OSIRIS dictionary, it converts the multiple response categories into variables, thus expanding the total number of variables in the dataset. The number of variables SPSS reports for these files are given below. These data are part of a larger study entitled "Field Surveys III: Studies in Crime and Law Enforcement in Major Metropolitan Areas." ICPSR distributes two related data collections: Survey of victimization and attitudes towards crime and law enforcement in Boston and Chicago, 1966 (ICPSR 9085) and Attitudes and perceptions of police officers in Boston, Chicago, and Washington, DC, 1966 (ICPSR 9087).".
- catalog description "OSIRIS dictionaries. Codebook available.".
- catalog description "Part number: 1 ; part name: General Data: Observers' Summary of Recorded Encounters ; file structure: rectangular ; case count: 840 ; variable count: 679 ; LRECL: 868 ; records per case: 1.".
- catalog description "Part number: 2 ; part name: Police Initiated Encounter Data ; file structure: rectangular ; case count: 738 ; variable count: 752 ; LRECL: 939 ; records per case: 1.".
- catalog description "Part number: 3 ; part name: Citizen Initiated Contact with Police in Field Area ; file structure: rectangular ; case count: 282 ; variable count: 721 ; LRECL: 907 ; records per case: 1.".
- catalog description "Part number: 4 ; part name: Police Dispatch Record ; file structure: rectangular ; case count: 6,172 ; variable count: 25 ; LRECL: 43 ; records per case: 1.".
- catalog description "Part number: 5 ; part name: Service Called-Initiated Encounter ; file structure: rectangular ; case count: 4,371 ; variable count: 719 ; LRECL: 906 ; records per case: 1.".
- catalog description "President's Commission on Law Enforcement and the Admin- istration of Justice.".
- catalog description "Reiss, A.J., Jr. "Systematic Observation of Natural Social Phenomena." In Herbert L. Costner (ed.), Sociological methodology, 1971. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, Inc., 1971.".
- catalog description "Reiss, A.J., Jr. The police and the public. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1971.".
- catalog description "These data have been influential in the development of theories of police behavior. Variables in the collection supply information on the nature and context of encounters between citizens and the police. Data are included on the characteristics and roles of individuals involved in an encounter, relationships among the participants in the encounter, individuals' definitions of the situation after the arrival of police, specific police actions and manner of police behavior during the encounter, and informal characterizations by police of participants involved in the encounter. In cases where offender suspects were involved, information was collected on restraints employed, searches, interrogations, confessions, advisement of rights, booking, and other arrest processes.".
- catalog description "Three sample cities (Chicago, Boston, and Washington, DC) were purposively selected to represent differences in the size, location, degree of control, and type of organization in police departments. Within each city, two police precincts (four in Washington) with high crime rates were selected to represent areas with different race and class compositions. The selected sites were: (1) Boston, MA: precincts Dorchester and Roxbury, (2) Chicago, IL: precincts Fillmore and Town Hall, and (3) Washington, DC: precincts #6, 10, 13, and 14. Stratified probability samples of police tours of duty were drawn. Evening and weekend shifts were overrepresented to maximize the number of encounters observed.".
- catalog description "Universe: All encounters between citizens and police in major metropolitan areas of the United States.".
- catalog isPartOf "ICPSR (Series) ; 9086.".
- catalog isPartOf "ICPSR ; 9086".
- catalog issued "1966".
- catalog issued "[198-?]".
- catalog language "und".
- catalog publisher "Ann Arbor, Mich. : Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor],".
- catalog requires "LRECL data format. Each of the files in this collection is accompanied by an OSIRIS dictionary that provides variable locations and abbreviated variable labels. Codebooks are available for Part 2 and Part 5 only. Facsimiles of the original coding forms are available for Parts 1,2,3, and 5. These forms may provide enough information for some types of analyses depending on the variables of interest. Several of the variables in these files were coded as OSIRIS "multiple response" variables. When a program such as SPSS translates the OSIRIS dictionary, it converts the multiple response categories into variables, thus expanding the total number of variables in the dataset. The number of variables SPSS reports for these files are given below. These data are part of a larger study entitled "Field Surveys III: Studies in Crime and Law Enforcement in Major Metropolitan Areas." ICPSR distributes two related data collections: Survey of victimization and attitudes towards crime and law enforcement in Boston and Chicago, 1966 (ICPSR 9085) and Attitudes and perceptions of police officers in Boston, Chicago, and Washington, DC, 1966 (ICPSR 9087).".
- catalog spatial "Boston, Chicago, Washington, D.C.".
- catalog spatial "Illinois Chicago.".
- catalog spatial "Massachusetts Boston.".
- catalog spatial "Washington (D.C.)".
- catalog subject "Police Illinois Chicago.".
- catalog subject "Police Massachusetts Boston.".
- catalog subject "Police Washington (D.C.)".
- catalog subject "Police-community relations Illinois Chicago.".
- catalog subject "Police-community relations Massachusetts Boston.".
- catalog subject "Police-community relations Washington (D.C.)".
- catalog subject "XVII. SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND BEHAVIOR. E. Crime and the Criminal Justice System".
- catalog title "Patterns of behavior in police and citizen transactions [computer file] : Boston, Chicago and Washington, DC, 1966 / principal investigator, Albert J. Reiss, Jr.".