Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this article is to examine the expectations, challenges and tensions officers describe while engaged with public schools to demonstrate that officers engage with students in public schools in a conscious, goal-oriented process to establish and maintain useful relationships.Design/methodology/approachData collection involved 104 semi-structured interviews (including follow up interviews) and 31 focus groups, conducted between 2014 and 2018 with police officers working in rural areas of a province in Atlantic Canada.FindingsUtilizing the concept of social capital, we analyze practices of investments alongside the understanding of rurality as socially interconnected and the rural school as a particular site of interconnectedness for police officers. We demonstrate how, while accumulating social capital, officers face role tension and fundamental barriers when trying to integrate into rural school communities.Originality/valueBy demonstrating the specificities of building social capital in schools and community environments in a rural setting, we contribute to understandings regarding the unique opportunities and challenges faced by police in rural schools in integrating effectively into schools and responding to youth-specific problems.
Reference41 articles.
1. Youth perceptions of police in rural Atlantic Canada;Police Practice and Research,2017
2. Rural schools, social capital and the big society: a theoretical and empirical exposition;British Educational Research Journal,2014
3. Bourdieu, P. (1986), “The forms of capital”, in Richardson, J.G. (Ed.), Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education, Greenwood Press, Westport, pp. 241-258.
4. Harnessing the social capital of rural communities for youth mental health: an asset-based community development framework;Australian Journal of Rural Health,2008
5. Community policing in schools: relationship-building and the responsibilities of school resource officers;Policing: A Journal of Policy and Practice,2019