Private security and public police

IF 1.2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW Journal of Empirical Legal Studies Pub Date : 2024-06-24 DOI:10.1111/jels.12393
Ben Grunwald, John Rappaport, Michael Berg
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Abstract

Private security officers outnumber police by a wide margin, and the gap may be growing. As cities have claimed to defund the police, many have quietly expanded their use of private security, reallocating spending from the public to the private sector. It is difficult to know what to make of these trends, largely because we know so little about what private security looks like on the ground. On one prevalent view of the facts, a shift from public to private security would mean little more than a change of uniform, as the two labor markets are deeply intertwined. Indeed, academics, the media, popular culture, and the police themselves all tell us that private security is some amalgam of a police retirement community and a dumping ground for disgraced former cops. But if, instead, private officers differ systematically from the public police—and crossover between the sectors is limited—then substitution from policing to private security could drastically change who is providing security services.

We bring novel data to bear on these questions, presenting the largest empirical study of private security to date. We introduce an administrative dataset covering nearly 300,000 licensed private security officers in the State of Florida. By linking this dataset to similarly comprehensive information about public law enforcement, we have, for the first time, a nearly complete picture of the entire security labor market in one state. We report two principal findings. First, the public and private security markets are predominantly characterized by occupational segregation, not integration. The individuals who compose the private security sector differ markedly from the public police; they are, for example, significantly less likely to be white men. We also find that few private officers, roughly 2%, have previously worked in public policing, and even fewer will go on to policing in the future. Second, while former police make up a small share of all private security, roughly a quarter of cops who do cross over have been fired from a policing job. In fact, fired police officers are nearly as likely to land in private security as to find another policing job, and a full quarter end up in one or the other. We explore the implications of these findings, including intersections with police abolition and the future of policing, at the paper's close.

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私营保安和公共警察
私人保安人员的数量远远超过警察,而且差距可能越来越大。在各大城市声称要为警察减资的同时,许多城市却悄然扩大了对私营保安公司的使用,将公共开支重新分配给私营保安公司。我们很难理解这些趋势,主要是因为我们对私营安保的实际情况知之甚少。根据一种普遍的事实观点,从公共安保部门转向私营安保部门只不过是换了一套制服而已,因为这两个劳动力市场深深地交织在一起。事实上,学术界、媒体、大众文化和警察本身都告诉我们,私营保安公司是警察退休社区和失宠前警察的垃圾场的混合体。但是,如果私营保安人员与公共警察存在系统性差异,而且行业间的交叉也很有限,那么从警务到私营保安的替代可能会极大地改变谁在提供保安服务。我们为这些问题提供了新颖的数据,展示了迄今为止最大规模的私营保安实证研究。我们引入了一个行政数据集,涵盖佛罗里达州近 30 万名持证私营保安人员。通过将该数据集与类似的公共执法综合信息联系起来,我们第一次几乎完整地了解了一个州的整个保安劳动力市场。我们报告了两个主要发现。首先,公共和私营保安市场的主要特点是职业隔离,而不是融合。私营安保部门的组成人员与公共警察有明显不同;例如,他们中白人男性的比例明显较低。我们还发现,以前从事过公共治安工作的私营保安人员很少,约占 2%,而将来会继续从事治安工作的人就更少了。其次,虽然前警察在所有私营保安人员中只占很小的比例,但大约有四分之一的警察是被警察解雇的。事实上,被解雇的警察进入私营保安行业的可能性几乎与找到另一份警务工作的可能性相同,整整四分之一的警察最终选择了其中之一。在本文的最后,我们将探讨这些发现的影响,包括与废除警察制度和未来警务工作的交集。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
11.80%
发文量
34
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