Using anonymous surveys of 3,235 officers in 30 police agencies, we tested hypotheses derived from prior policing research, legitimacy theory, and disciplinary fairness literature on the intentions of police officers to report acts of misconduct perpetrated by fellow officers. We examined features of the normative order involving peer reporting of police misconduct at both the individual agency and aggregate police subculture levels. Consistent with previous research, the perceived seriousness of the offense and legitimacy (endorsement) are consistently strong predictors of officers’ intentions to report misconduct. We also find that perceived fairness of discipline provides significant results, but the direction of the relationship depends...
This paper analyses police officer perspectives on the seriousness of potential misconduct or unethi...
Police officers sometimes violate laws and internal procedures to the benefit of society or the poli...
Legal authorities and the public live in two separate worlds. One world is suffused with law, and th...
As police personnel carry out their mandates of enforcing the law, maintaining order, and serving th...
Although police misconduct has interested policing scholars for many years, extant research has been...
This paper explores the critical societal issue of police misconduct. Though a vast amount of litera...
Although police misconduct has generated much social concern in the United States in recent years, t...
Policing is recognized as a morally dangerous profession. This study extends analyses of police corr...
Purpose – Misconduct and deviance amongst police officers are substantial issues in policing around ...
We estimate causal peer effects in police misconduct using data from about 35,000 officers and staff...
Why does police misconduct happen in the U.S.? Previous research on this topic has focused on indivi...
Purpose Many examinations of police misconduct involve case study methodologies applied to a single ...
Purpose: – The purpose of this paper is to explore Australian police officers’ perceptions of unethi...
Research on misconduct has explored both what causes actors to commit certain behaviors as well as t...
Purpose Theories of procedural justice have facilitated the development of a process-based approach ...
This paper analyses police officer perspectives on the seriousness of potential misconduct or unethi...
Police officers sometimes violate laws and internal procedures to the benefit of society or the poli...
Legal authorities and the public live in two separate worlds. One world is suffused with law, and th...
As police personnel carry out their mandates of enforcing the law, maintaining order, and serving th...
Although police misconduct has interested policing scholars for many years, extant research has been...
This paper explores the critical societal issue of police misconduct. Though a vast amount of litera...
Although police misconduct has generated much social concern in the United States in recent years, t...
Policing is recognized as a morally dangerous profession. This study extends analyses of police corr...
Purpose – Misconduct and deviance amongst police officers are substantial issues in policing around ...
We estimate causal peer effects in police misconduct using data from about 35,000 officers and staff...
Why does police misconduct happen in the U.S.? Previous research on this topic has focused on indivi...
Purpose Many examinations of police misconduct involve case study methodologies applied to a single ...
Purpose: – The purpose of this paper is to explore Australian police officers’ perceptions of unethi...
Research on misconduct has explored both what causes actors to commit certain behaviors as well as t...
Purpose Theories of procedural justice have facilitated the development of a process-based approach ...
This paper analyses police officer perspectives on the seriousness of potential misconduct or unethi...
Police officers sometimes violate laws and internal procedures to the benefit of society or the poli...
Legal authorities and the public live in two separate worlds. One world is suffused with law, and th...