Antecedents and the nature of police corruption and impunity in postcolonial and/or developing countries -- Integrity training : the importance of a moral resoning and rigorous evaluations -- Change in police organizations -- twoards a top down/bottom up strategy -- Why civilian oversight is NOT the answer -- addressing use of force and other human rights violations -- Rethinking community policing -- collective efficacy first -- The not so exemplary example -- Bangladesh National Police -- Tying it all together -- I'm smarter than a ninth grader -- the culture of lawfulness model and its origins in the schools.
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This Brief explores the problem of creating organizational change and a culture of lawfulness within police organizations in the developing world. In many countries where police are charged with responding to crime, they are themselves entrenched in histories of corruption, human rights abuses, inefficiency as well as a lack of public trust. While police corruption can happen anywhere, areas of political transition tend to have a more entrenched cultural history of corruption. However, the author argues that even in the most challenged forces, there remains hope for organizational change. This brief demonstrates how understanding the local socio-political context, and applying evidence-based best practices for police integrity training can bring about change. The brief summarizes the current state of knowledge on police integrity training, strategies for rethinking corruption and community policing, as well as two case studies in Bangladesh and Mexico with applications for other regions.
Springer Nature
com.springer.onix.9783030004132
Police Integrity in the Developing World : Building a Culture of Lawfulness.