Education, Science, Technology, Innovation and Life
Open Access
Sign In

Construction of Legal Police Authority under the Background of New Media and Data Analysis

Download as PDF

DOI: 10.23977/mediacr.2022.030110 | Downloads: 3 | Views: 449

Author(s)

Yanchang Hou 1

Affiliation(s)

1 Criminal Investigation Police University of China, Shenyang, 110854, China

Corresponding Author

Yanchang Hou

ABSTRACT

With the advancement of information technology, many new types of Internet social media have emerged, such as WeChat, Weibo, blogs, and forums, which have formed a new pattern of information dissemination. The police is a government organization. The image of the police organization is related to the image of the government and its credibility. Under the new situation, the construction of the image of the police organization has an inseparable relationship with the new media. According to surveys, over 71.56% of the public will choose new media tools to expose issues of law and discipline. In recent years, some negative information that affects the image of the police has spread and fermented rapidly, causing a crisis in the image of the police and affecting the law enforcement environment. The police organization must integrate new media to establish a positive police organization image, and promote social stability and harmony. Under this background, construction of the legal police authority under the background of new media and data analysis is discussed in this paper. We collect the data from the public databases as the analytic basis of the research. The machine learning models are integrated to help evaluate the model in detail.

KEYWORDS

New media, Data mining, Data analysis, Legal management, Police authority, Construction

CITE THIS PAPER

Yanchang Hou, Construction of Legal Police Authority under the Background of New Media and Data Analysis. Media and Communication Research (2022) Vol. 3: 53-60. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.23977/mediacr.2022.030110.

REFERENCES

[1] Trinkner, R., Jackson, J. and Tyler, T.R., 2018. Bounded authority: Expanding "appropriate" police behavior beyond procedural justice. Law and human behavior, 42(3), p.280.
[2] Kaiser, K. and Reisig, M.D., 2017. Legal socialization and self-reported criminal offending: The role of procedural justice and legal orientations. Journal of Quantitative Criminology, pp.1-20.
[3] Cherney, A. and Murphy, K., 2017. Policing marginalized groups in a diverse society: Using procedural justice to promote group belongingness and trust in police. In Police-Citizen Relations across the World (pp. 177-198). Routledge.
[4] Sheptycki, J., 2017. Liquid modernity and the police métier; thinking about information flows in police organisation. Global Crime, 18(3), pp.286-302.
[5] Naidu, S. and van der Wielen, K., 2017. Evil and the Hero-Villain Binary in Deon Meyer's Post-Apartheid Crime Thriller, Devil's Peak. The Function of Evil across Disciplinary Contexts, p.117.
[6] Hansson, J., Hurtig, A.K., Lauritz, L.E. and Padyab, M., 2017. Swedish Police Officers' Job Strain, Work-Related Social Support and General Mental Health. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology, 32(2), pp.128-137.
[7] Wood, J.D., Watson, A.C. and Fulambarker, A.J., 2017. The "gray zone" of police work during mental health encounters: findings from an observational study in Chicago. Police quarterly, 20(1), pp.81-105.
[8] Rosenbaum, D.P., Maskaly, J., Lawrence, D.S., Escamilla, J.H., Enciso, G., Christoff, T.E. and Posick, C., 2017. The Police- Community Interaction Survey: measuring police performance in new ways. Policing: An International Journal of Police Strategies & Management, 40(1), pp.112-127.
[9] Krikorian, G. and Vailly, J., 2018. How could the ethical management of health data in the medical field inform police use of DNA? Frontiers in Public Health, 6, p.154.
[10] Kennedy, D.C., 2017. In Search of a Balance between Police Power and Privacy in the Cybercrime Treaty. In Computer Crime (pp. 205-264). Routledge.
[11] Murphy, K., Madon, N.S. and Cherney, A., 2017. Promoting Muslims’ cooperation with police in counter-terrorism: The interaction between procedural justice, police legitimacy and law legitimacy. Policing: An International Journal, 40(3), pp.544- 559.
[12] Stevenson, K., 2018. Chief Constables as 'moral heroes' and guardians of public morality. In Leading the Police (pp. 109- 126). Routledge.
[13] Maguire, E.R., Lowrey, B.V. and Johnson, D., 2017. Evaluating the relative impact of positive and negative encounters with police: A randomized experiment. Journal of experimental criminology, 13(3), pp.367-391.
[14] Divon, S.A. and Bøås, M., 2017. Negotiating justice: legal pluralism and gender-based violence in Liberia. Third World Quarterly, 38(6), pp.1381-1398.

All published work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Copyright © 2016 - 2031 Clausius Scientific Press Inc. All Rights Reserved.