154 THE SO C IA L SC IENC E JO URNA L Vol. 35/ No. l/ 1998 in interior areas than they are other types of law enforcement. Moreover, agents see the tendency of some sectors of the public (e.g., immigrant advocates, religious leaders, and employers) to oppose enforcement efforts, such as work-site raids, as an additional impediment to their work that also leaves agents further isolated. Weissinger certainly could have pursued the external relations issue much further, as he set it up in some detail in the early portion of the book, but he ultimately devoted just a few pages to it. Those are some of the key points from this book and most likely to be of interest to students of one of the most beleaguered and now rapidly growing of all bureau- cracies in federal government. Certainly, Weissinger has added to our knowledge of one overlooked unit in the INS. However, on the whole, his treatment of the topic is fairly superficial. One would hope that his extensive qualitative interviews and eleven years of experience as an investigator would lead to greater depth of informa- tion and extensive details, but we are given little of that. He devotes approximately one half of this slim book (the first four chapters) to setting up his study (e.g., theory, methods, etc.), leaving us with only three data chapters, though he also drops data in somewhat at random in his set-up chapters. He devotes very little discussion to immigration policy, neither in his background on the INS nor elsewhere. Further, he does not integrate his theory and data very well, as often times theoretical or general conceptual quotations are inserted and then hardly linked to the data, and not at all in some cases. The book obviously also could have used a great deal more editing, for not only organization and coherence, but even for copy-editing and spelling, which is the publisher’s fault. Finally, the book desperately needs some updating to briefly discuss the numerous immigration enforcement policy changes since the early 1980s: the enormous growth in INS jurisdiction and resources, the shift among the public and policy makers to strongly favor immigration enforce- ment, and record levels of naturalization. Surely, Weissinger has some insights to offer on how INS investigators may be dealing with complexities of the dual service-enforcement mission today. Despite numerous flaws, this book does make a contribution to our knowledge of an under-studied, important agency, and for this the author is to be commended. Many others, one hopes, will take up the task of further prying open the doors of the INS for more academic research as well as broader public examination and debate. Police Ethics: Crisis in Law Enforcement by Tom Barker Springfield, IL: Charles Thomas Publishing, 1996, 94 pages Forces of Deviance: Understanding the Dark Side of Policing by Victor E. Kappeler, Richard D. Slader, and Geoffrey P. Alpert Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press, 1994,308 pages Reviewed by: Nick Braune, Mount Marty College Tom Barker’s book on police ethics is one of many which have been appearing on the subject over the last few years. It begins by admitting charges that an ethical crisis exists in law enforcement. As a former president of the Academy of Criminal Justice