Rachel Rogers, a psychologist with years of clinical experience working with police officers, presents her findings from doctoral research into policing culture and male officer mental health.
Policing's masculine code provides the service with steadiness, camaraderie, and a bias for action, but also limits the pathway to care when strength is defined as never bending.
Control them, contain them, convert them into humour or action.
Based on her doctoral research with UK male officers, Rogers argues for a new honour code, which includes credible confidentiality, culturally competent care, restored safe spaces, and language that aligns help-seeking with operational strategy.
From boyhood to brotherhood, men learn to manage their feelings by controlling, containing, and converting them into humour or action.
Author's summary: Rethinking masculinity in policing to improve mental health.