Defining what’s at stake: a person-centered approach to conceptualizing the health and social impacts of police violence in the United States
Jé Judson, Mienah Z. Sharif

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new way to understand how police violence affects health and society, focusing on structural racism and long-term community impacts.
Contribution
The paper introduces a reconceptualization of police violence's health impacts using the Public Health Critical Race Praxis framework.
Findings
Current conceptualizations of police violence and health are limited by linear, individual-focused, and temporally narrow approaches.
A Public Health Critical Race Praxis framework better captures the multidimensional and intergenerational harms of police violence.
The paper provides case studies and actionable recommendations for public health professionals to address police violence and promote equity.
Abstract
The increasing efforts among public health researchers to examine the connections between police violence and health outcomes has resulted in growing discoveries about the implications for both direct and vicarious exposure as well as disparities by race and ethnicity. To date, the conceptualization of police violence and health has largely focused on single causes and/or mechanisms at one point in time and focused on individuals most proximal to impact. However, the prevailing conceptualizations are limited in scope. They are relatively linear, do not account for multiple dimensions of harm, and are void of temporal factors that span across communities and generations–all factors that are sustained by forms of structural racism. We offer a reconceptualization guided by the Public Health Critical Race Praxis (PHCRP), a public health offshoot of Critical Race Theory, that offers public…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolicing Practices and Perceptions · Gun Ownership and Violence Research · Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Research
