Are Domestic Incidents Really More Dangerous to Police? Findings from the 2016 National Incident Based Reporting System
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-5-2019
Publication Title
Justice Quarterly
First page number:
1
Last page number:
24
Abstract
It is widely believed among police officers that domestic incidents are among the most dangerous incidents to which they respond. However, most research in this area suffers from the “denominator problem,” where prior studies have focused on incidents resulting in harm to police officers and failed to account for incidents not resulting in harm. Such methodologies can produce drastically misleading results. This paper uses data from the 2016 National Incident Based Reporting System (NIBRS) to overcome the denominator problem. We examine the probability of (1) an officer being assaulted and (2) an officer being injured or killed when responding to a domestic incident compared to a non-domestic incident while controlling for other potentially important variables. Results indicate that officers are significantly more likely to be assaulted or injured when responding to non-domestic incidents. Implications for law enforcement training, victim legitimacy, and future research are discussed.
Keywords
Domestic violence; Violence against police; Assaults; Injuries; NIBRS
Disciplines
Criminology and Criminal Justice | Legal Studies | Social and Behavioral Sciences
Language
English
Repository Citation
Nix, J.,
Richards, T. N.,
Pinchevsky, G. M.,
Wright, E. M.
(2019).
Are Domestic Incidents Really More Dangerous to Police? Findings from the 2016 National Incident Based Reporting System.
Justice Quarterly
1-24.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07418825.2019.1675748