RT Article T1 Promoting community collaboration in counterterrorism: do social identities and perceptions of legitimacy mediate reactions to procedural justice policing? JF The British journal of criminology VO 57 IS 5 SP 1144 OP 1164 A1 Madon, Natasha S. A2 Murphy, Kristina A2 Cherney, Adrian LA English YR 2017 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1564965481 AB The present study examines whether procedural justice policing can promote Muslims’ willingness to cooperate with police in terrorism prevention. Using survey data from 800 Australian Muslims, we show that Muslims value procedural justice when it comes to working with police to prevent terrorism. We also examine whether social identification processes or perceptions of police legitimacy explain why procedural justice promotes Muslims’ willingness to work with police. The findings suggest that despite the salience of identity within the current political discourse about terrorism and Islam, perceptions of police legitimacy appear to have a stronger bearing on Muslims’ predicted behaviour. We consider the implications of our findings for theories in the procedural justice field and for counterterrorism policy and practice. K1 Counter-terrorism K1 Cooperation K1 Procedural justice policing K1 Legitimacy K1 Social identity K1 Terrorismusbekämpfung K1 Verfahrensgerechtigkeit K1 Kooperation DO 10.1093/bjc/azw053