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Confidence in the Police: Where does Taiwan Rank in the World?
Authors:Liqun Cao  Mengyan Dai
Institution:(1) Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, Michigan 48197, USA;(2) Division of Criminal Justice, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
Abstract:The study of public opinion toward the police in Taiwan has not, heretofore, included comparative research. The current study fills this void in the literature by analyzing the data from the World Values Surveys. It was found that Taiwanese confidence in the police was reasonably good for a society experiencing democratic transition. Although lower than many more mature democratic societies such as Finland and the USA, confidence in the police is among the top one-third of fifty countries and is significantly higher than those found in other Asian and European countries that also experienced democratic transition. Further regression analyses of data from the Philippines, South Korea and Taiwan indicated that the differences between those three countries are substantive and cannot be explained away after the demographic social and attitudinal variables have been controlled.An early version of this paper was presented at “The Second International Conference in Crime and Its Control,” Taiwan, April 2005. We would like to thank Professors Susyan Jou and Lanying Huang, for providing information on Taiwan, and Professor Alethea Helbig, for polishing the languages of the paper. The views expressed in the paper are all ours.
Keywords:Confidence in the police  Cross-national public opinions  Democratic policing  Police in Korea  Philippines  and Taiwan
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