(Probably worth reading despite the use of the word "operationalize".)

Abstract

In this paper we operationalize and empirically test six core tenets of 
pacification theory derived from Marxian political economy using time 
series data for the USA from 1972-2009. Our analysis confirms that 
rising inequality is statistically significantly correlated to increased 
public and private policing over time and that increased public and 
private policing is also statistically significantly correlated to 
increased industrial exploitation as measured through “surplus-value”. 
While unionization correlates to strikes and lock-outs which suggests 
that unions have an important mobilizing role for the industrial reserve 
army, unionization also inversely correlates to total policing 
employment. As union membership decreases, policing employment 
increases, which gives credence to the notion that unions may also act 
as policing agents for capital. We conclude that when these findings are 
coupled with our previous international research of 45 countries for the 
snapshot year of 2004 (Rigakos and Ergul 2011) that produced almost 
identical results, there appears to be significant empirical support for 
pacification theory. The relationships we have discovered recur both 
across time and international contexts despite the fact that variations 
in legal norms and institutional histories of policing are varied and 
complex.

full: 
https://www.academia.edu/5524921/The_Pacification_of_the_American_Working_Class_A_Time_Series_Analysis
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