Managing Criminal Justice Organizations
Position Power: this is the power that emerges from the rank or the position one has within an organization. A supervisor of a group of custodians that also provide security at a university has a position from which he or she can decide what tasks to give the custodians (what buildings to clean and monitor for unusual behaviors). This kind of power is based on simple authority -- if you work for a supervisor his position gives him the license to direct your behavior while on the job. And for the supervisor, the position gives that person the latitude to make decisions as to how others should behave or to what tasks they are assigned.
Coercion Power: this leads into the negative use of power, as the word "coercion" carries with in a connotation of abusiveness. In this form of power a person uses his or her ability to influence others through "…threats, punishments or sanction" (Merchant, 2014). A married lieutenant on a police force is having an affair with a secretary in the office, which is against the regulations. He tells his underlings if they tell anyone about this stealthy affair, he will give them the dirtiest assignments that are...
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