RT Article T1 Democratic Policing, Building Trust, and Willingness to Call 911: Examining the Relationship between Law Enforcement Legitimacy and Calling the Police JF American journal of criminal justice VO 49 IS 2 SP 183 OP 200 A1 McLean, Kyle A2 Miller, Bryan Lee A2 Pyle, Andrew 1955- A2 Bauwens, Olivia LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1883632072 AB Recent debates over policing have centered on the proper role of policing in society. Using the lenses of democratic policing and police legitimacy, we suggest that individuals’ willingness to call the police is one method for understanding the public’s consent to be policed and their view of the appropriate role of policing. This simple relationship is further complicated by differential relationships between willingness to cooperate with the police and four typologies of police legitimacy: trustworthiness, normative alignment, obligation to obey, and traditional legitimacy. Using the pretest and posttest of a survey vignette, we show that (1) individuals who legitimate the police on the basis of their traditional role in society are more likely to call the police for benign issues, (2) officer-involved shootings negatively impact individuals’ willingness to call the police, and (3) there is a greater reduction in willingness to call the police following an officer-involved shooting when individuals legitimate the police on the basis of perceived normative alignment. K1 Call 911 K1 Crime reporting K1 democratic policing K1 Legitimacy K1 Policing DO 10.1007/s12103-023-09751-7