Confidence in the police among Korean people: An expressive model versus an instrumental model |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Nijmegen, Faculty of Law, Department of Criminal Law & Criminology, The Netherlands;2. Scottish Institute for Policing Research, School of the Environment, University of Dundee, Dundee DD1 4HN, UK |
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Abstract: | The legitimacy of police authority has often been questioned due to a relatively low level of public confidence in the police in South Korea. Instrumental and expressive perspectives provide competing explanations of the determinants of public confidence in the police. Empirical studies comparing these competing perspectives are thus far limited to British and US studies. To fill this void, this study used a structural equation modeling approach to examine expressive and instrumental models of confidence in the police among South Koreans. Analyses of data from the Korean National Crime Victimization Survey revealed that both models were empirically supported. However, the expressive perspective (i.e., perceptions of local disorder, informal social control, and social cohesion) was more important than the instrumental perspective (i.e., worries about crime) in explaining confidence in the police among Koreans. The implications for research and policy are discussed based on the findings. |
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Keywords: | Confidence in the police Expressive perspective Instrumental perspective Legitimacy of police authority Public satisfaction with the police |
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