| Literature DB >> 28286406 |
Jennifer D Wood1, Amy C Watson2, Anjali J Fulambarker2.
Abstract
Although improving police responses to mental health crises has received significant policy attention, most encounters between police and persons with mental illnesses do not involve major crimes or violence, nor do they rise to the level of requiring emergency apprehension. Here, we report on field observations of police officers handling mental health-related encounters in Chicago. Findings confirm that these encounters often occur in the "gray zone", where the problems at hand do not call for formal or legalistic interventions including arrest and emergency apprehension. In examining how police resolved such situations, we observed three core features of police work: (1) accepting temporary solutions to chronic vulnerability; (2) using local knowledge to guide decision-making; and (3) negotiating peace with complainants and call subjects. Study findings imply the need to advance field-based studies using systematic social observations of gray zone decision-making within and across distinct geographic and place-based contexts. Policy implications for supporting police interventions, including place-based enhancements of gray zone resources, are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Police; crisis intervention; mental health encounters; peacekeeping
Year: 2016 PMID: 28286406 PMCID: PMC5342894 DOI: 10.1177/1098611116658875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Police Q ISSN: 1098-6111