Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/002297002/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 24 of
24
with 100 items per page.
- catalog abstract "Data on police-citizen encounters were collected to explore the peacekeeping functions of the police and their handling of encounters with mentally ill persons. The data were gathered through observations by researchers riding in police cars in two Chicago police districts during a 14-month period in 1980-1981. There are two parts to this dataset. First, information was collected once per shift on the general level of activity during the shift and the observer's perceptions of emotions/attitudes displayed by the police officers he/she observed. Also, information is included for each of the 270 shifts about the personal characteristics, work history, and working relationships of the police officers observed. The second part of the dataset contains detailed information on each police-citizen encounter including its nature, location, police actions and/or responses, citizens involved, and their characteristics and behavior. A unique and consistent shift identification number is attached to each encounter so that information about police officer characteristics from the first ("shift-level") part of the dataset may be matched with the second ("encounter-level") part. Missing data were recoded to 9's by the Principal Investigator and can mean either actual missing data or unknown or inapplicable data.".
- catalog contributor b3301495.
- catalog contributor b3301496.
- catalog contributor b3301497.
- catalog created "[198-?]".
- catalog date "1980".
- catalog date "[198-?]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[198-?]".
- catalog description "Chicago.".
- catalog description "Data on police-citizen encounters were collected to explore the peacekeeping functions of the police and their handling of encounters with mentally ill persons. The data were gathered through observations by researchers riding in police cars in two Chicago police districts during a 14-month period in 1980-1981. There are two parts to this dataset. First, information was collected once per shift on the general level of activity during the shift and the observer's perceptions of emotions/attitudes displayed by the police officers he/she observed. Also, information is included for each of the 270 shifts about the personal characteristics, work history, and working relationships of the police officers observed. The second part of the dataset contains detailed information on each police-citizen encounter including its nature, location, police actions and/or responses, citizens involved, and their characteristics and behavior. A unique and consistent shift identification number is attached to each encounter so that information about police officer characteristics from the first ("shift-level") part of the dataset may be matched with the second ("encounter-level") part. Missing data were recoded to 9's by the Principal Investigator and can mean either actual missing data or unknown or inapplicable data.".
- catalog description "There are 1,382 police-citizen encounters involving 2,555 citizens in this collection. There are three cards per case in the Shift Level Data File and sixteen cards per case in the Encounter Level Data File. The logical record length of both files is 80 characters.".
- catalog extent "2 data files ( logical records) +".
- catalog isPartOf "ICPSR (Series) ; 8438.".
- catalog isPartOf "ICPSR ; 8438".
- catalog issued "1980".
- catalog issued "[198-?]".
- catalog language "und".
- catalog publisher "Ann Arbor, Mich. : Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor],".
- catalog spatial "Chicago.".
- catalog spatial "Illinois Chicago.".
- catalog subject "Mentally ill Care Illinois Chicago.".
- catalog subject "Police discretion Illinois Chicago.".
- catalog subject "XVII. Social Institutions and Behavior. E. Crime and the Criminal Justice System.".
- catalog title "Keeping the peace [computer file] : police discretion and the mentally disordered in Chicago, 1980-1981 / principal investigator, Linda A. Tepin.".