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-Robert Reiner, Emeritus Professor of Criminology, LSE
"This is a lively and fascinating book which places our understanding of policing ethics, integrity and police corruption within a long term timeline. The author traces how a particular research technique within policing studies - the use of 'scenario' based surveys of police officers to test officers' attitudes to the seriousness of a series of possible forms of police misconduct and their willingness to report those forms to others - has been utilised in policing research over a 50 plus year history. It begins with US-based pioneering policing research in the 1970s and takes us through the use of, and lessons learnt by, scenario-based research in later decades in the UK and internationally. This includes, by way of an autoethnography, the author's own critical research over the past 20 years, revisiting some earlier published research on the theme. This book is essential reading for those studying police integrity and corruption and the wider field of police cultures."
- Professor Steve Savage, Emeritus Professor of Criminology, University of Portsmouth.
This book outlines over 20 years of in-depth research on police culture and the blue code of silence which is said to protect and perpetuate police misconduct. It discusses the existing literature and draws upon first-hand research with many serving police officers and some police support staff. These studies not only provide evidence of the police code but are also useful for examining why and how to prevent its ill-effects. A recent (post 1950s) history of police cultural research which concentrates on ethics and integrity is provided with reflections on change and a discussion of the College of Policing’s introduction of a code of ethics in 2014. It asks whether anything has changed but mainly analyses the individual studies and what the potential lessons learnt are from the various scandals that have come to light. The questionnaires and research instruments used are included in the text for replication purposes, and alongside this, the ethics of such studies are discussed. This book will speak to police officers including those enrolled on police degrees, policing scholars and students, and criminologists.
Louise Westmarland is Professor of Criminology at The Open University, UK.
-Robert Reiner, Emeritus Professor of Criminology, LSE
"This is a lively and fascinating book which places our understanding of policing ethics, integrity and police corruption within a long term timeline. The author traces how a particular research technique within policing studies - the use of 'scenario' based surveys of police officers to test officers' attitudes to the seriousness of a series of possible forms of police misconduct and their willingness to report those forms to others - has been utilised in policing research over a 50 plus year history. It begins with US-based pioneering policing research in the 1970s and takes us through the use of, and lessons learnt by, scenario-based research in later decades in the UK and internationally. This includes, by way of an autoethnography, the author's own critical research over the past 20 years, revisiting some earlier published research on the theme. This book is essential reading for those studying police integrity and corruption and the wider field of police cultures."
- Professor Steve Savage, Emeritus Professor of Criminology, University of Portsmouth.
This book outlines over 20 years of in-depth research on police culture and the blue code of silence which is said to protect and perpetuate police misconduct. It discusses the existing literature and draws upon first-hand research with many serving police officers and some police support staff. These studies not only provide evidence of the police code but are also useful for examining why and how to prevent its ill-effects. A recent (post 1950s) history of police cultural research which concentrates on ethics and integrity is provided with reflections on change and a discussion of the College of Policing’s introduction of a code of ethics in 2014. It asks whether anything has changed but mainly analyses the individual studies and what the potential lessons learnt are from the various scandals that have come to light. The questionnaires and research instruments used are included in the text for replication purposes, and alongside this, the ethics of such studies are discussed. This book will speak to police officers including those enrolled on police degrees, policing scholars and students, and criminologists.
Louise Westmarland is Professor of Criminology at The Open University, UK.
1: Why is police ethics and culture of concern?.-2: Still silent after all these years? History and literature of police ethics and the blue code.-3: Scenario based research and design and ethics of research processes.-4: The Blue Code of Silence (based around the findings of on Westmarland’s 2005 study published in Policing and Society journal).-5: The blue code or the new code? (based mostly on Westmarland and Rowe’s 2011 study published in Policing and Society journal in 2018).-6: Cultures of silence and corruption.-Part 1.-7: Cultures of silence and corruption.-Part. 2 (the qualitative data).-8: Conclusions.
| Erscheinungsjahr: | 2025 |
|---|---|
| Fachbereich: | Strafrecht |
| Genre: | Recht, Sozialwissenschaften, Wirtschaft |
| Produktart: | Nachschlagewerke |
| Rubrik: | Recht & Wirtschaft |
| Medium: | Taschenbuch |
| Inhalt: |
xvii
207 S. 1 s/w Illustr. 7 farbige Illustr. 207 p. 8 illus. 7 illus. in color. |
| ISBN-13: | 9783031850998 |
| ISBN-10: | 3031850998 |
| Sprache: | Englisch |
| Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
| Autor: | Westmarland, Louise |
| Hersteller: |
Palgrave Macmillan
Springer International Publishing AG |
| Verantwortliche Person für die EU: | Springer Verlag GmbH, Tiergartenstr. 17, D-69121 Heidelberg, juergen.hartmann@springer.com |
| Maße: | 210 x 148 x 13 mm |
| Von/Mit: | Louise Westmarland |
| Erscheinungsdatum: | 13.05.2025 |
| Gewicht: | 0,301 kg |