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Policing and Society
An International Journal of Research and Policy
Volume 34, 2024 - Issue 7
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Articles

‘No one wants to end up on YouTube’: sousveillance and ‘cop-baiting’ in Canadian policing

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Pages 674-691 | Received 02 Sep 2023, Accepted 07 Mar 2024, Published online: 11 Mar 2024
 

ABSTRACT

Citizen recordings of police-public encounters are increasingly surfacing on social media, especially those in which individuals intentionally create confrontational situations to provoke a desired response from police officers. The latter is a form of, what we term, cop-baiting, driven mainly by the ubiquitous sousveillance of police by citizens. Although the literature has explored how media can impact public perceptions of police and police legitimacy, little research has examined cop-baiting social media content specifically or the impacts of cop-baiting forms of sousveillance. The current study investigates police officers’ perspectives, concerns, and experiences of these phenomena while concurrently exploring the perceived consequences of these on officers and policing, representing a novel departure from previous work. To examine police sousveillance and cop-baiting, we draw on qualitative interviews with over sixty police officers from across Canada who have been involved in the policing of politically contentious events. Most notable among the findings were that officers reported a range of impacts of sousveillance and cop-baiting, including occupational stress, effects on families and loved ones, and professional and reputational implications. It was also uncovered that police sousveillance and cop-baiting could significantly undermine police legitimacy and public trust. The current study concludes with some final thoughts on the meaning of cop-baiting and the problematic nature of this activity, a future research agenda, and considerations for police and policymakers.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 ‘Doxxing’ refers to the release of personal, identifying information about someone. It is a frequent tool of online and, increasingly, offline harassment.

2 This figure shows that major events related to racism and policing drive searches on Google and/or a lack of public interest in this matter prior to such events. While we cannot know for certain the cause of this spike in Google searches or why Google searches were low before this major event, we can note increased public internet queries on racism and systematic racism in policing in Canada following this incident, highlighting some relationship between public interest, major events, and the posting online of videoed actions of police.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Government of Alberta: [Grant Number #22SPHIFR28-2-P1].

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