Most findings from developed western societies – particularly USA and UK – have consistently found that young people's judgement about police legitimacy is built predominantly on procedural justice. Empirical investigations to test this assertion among youth from developing and less cohesive societies remain scarce. This article explores the possibility of closing this gap in literature. It assesses the strength of procedural justice effect in comparison with other police behaviour and inherent characteristics of young people in Nigeria. Using data collected from six secondary schools in Nigeria, the results substantiate the procedural justice hypothesis in the West; confirming that procedural justice is a more important predictor of police...
The evolution of the policing role over the last decade has led to 33 police forces in England and W...
What the public thinks, believes and feels about the police determines if people will obey or disobe...
The objective of the paper is to examine the Nigerian Police Force as a colonial institution that ha...
Do people living in societies rife with police corruption comply with the law because they perceive ...
This study empirically examines the everyday problem of corrupt policing and other related abuses in...
Procedural justice theory predicts a relationship between police behaviour, individuals’ normative e...
Certain types of police actions are beginning to represent ‘the ordinary’ – many of which seem to be...
A consistent body of research shows that a key reason that adults support police is that they view t...
In the eyes of the public, police play an important role in combating crime and maintaining law and ...
Is fairness in process and outcome a generalizable driver of police legitimacy? In many industriali...
Research on the correlation between education, occupation and criminality among the youth has grown ...
Contemporary Nigerian societies without doubt are threatened by waves of uncertainty, galvanised by ...
Mismanagement and recurring strikes in the Nigerian educational sector have institutionalized a leg...
This paper summarising ‘procedural justice’ approaches to policing, contrasting these to the more po...
Although the impact of procedural justice on citizens’ satisfaction with the police and other branch...
The evolution of the policing role over the last decade has led to 33 police forces in England and W...
What the public thinks, believes and feels about the police determines if people will obey or disobe...
The objective of the paper is to examine the Nigerian Police Force as a colonial institution that ha...
Do people living in societies rife with police corruption comply with the law because they perceive ...
This study empirically examines the everyday problem of corrupt policing and other related abuses in...
Procedural justice theory predicts a relationship between police behaviour, individuals’ normative e...
Certain types of police actions are beginning to represent ‘the ordinary’ – many of which seem to be...
A consistent body of research shows that a key reason that adults support police is that they view t...
In the eyes of the public, police play an important role in combating crime and maintaining law and ...
Is fairness in process and outcome a generalizable driver of police legitimacy? In many industriali...
Research on the correlation between education, occupation and criminality among the youth has grown ...
Contemporary Nigerian societies without doubt are threatened by waves of uncertainty, galvanised by ...
Mismanagement and recurring strikes in the Nigerian educational sector have institutionalized a leg...
This paper summarising ‘procedural justice’ approaches to policing, contrasting these to the more po...
Although the impact of procedural justice on citizens’ satisfaction with the police and other branch...
The evolution of the policing role over the last decade has led to 33 police forces in England and W...
What the public thinks, believes and feels about the police determines if people will obey or disobe...
The objective of the paper is to examine the Nigerian Police Force as a colonial institution that ha...