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9 Police Q. 3 (2006)

handle is hein.journals/policqurt9 and id is 1 raw text is: 














STRUCTURAL DETERMINANTS OF

POLICE EFFECTIVENESS IN

MARKET DEMOCRACIES


HUNG-EN  SUNG
Columbia University



   This study examined structural correlates of police effectiveness in 28 market
   democracies. It found that perceptions of police effectiveness rose in coun-
   tries with low homicide rates, independent judiciaries, and high income.
   Greater political freedoms and a lower robbery rate were associated with
   low police effectiveness. The size of police forces and population and unem-
   ployment rates were largely irrelevant. Findings demonstrated the basic
   dependence of quality policing on good judicial governance and a healthy
   economy. Making the police more effective requires reform of more than the
   police. In postmodern democracies, effective policing will require improved
   media portrayal ofcrime and increased democratization ofpolice tactics and
   strategies.

   Keywords:  police effectiveness; comparative policing; democracy;
              determinants



Police effectiveness is becoming a paramount issue in democratic societies
as the nature and quality of government is largely defined by public percep-
tions of the state's ability to make good use of its coercive powers. A strong
and legitimate state delivers security and justice to citizens' satisfaction; in
contrast, rampant crime problems and  state disrespect for civil liberties
weaken  public support and  thus the legitimacy of the political system
(Aydin, 1997; Ellison, 2000; Mawby, 2002; Sung, 2002). As the state organ
that has the most face-to-face contacts with ordinary citizens and bran-
dishes the most intrusive powers, the police are continuously negotiating
their missions and goals with the society at large, and they are under

POLICE QUARTERLY Vol. 9 No. 1, March 2006 3-19
DOI: 10.1177/1098611103257061
© 2006 Sage Publications

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