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Rainless West: The Integrity Survey's Role in Agency Accountability

NCJ Number
245903
Journal
Police Quarterly Volume: 16 Issue: 2 Dated: June 2013 Pages: 148-176
Author(s)
Sanja Kutnjak Ivkoviæ; Maria Haberfeld; Robert Peacock
Date Published
June 2013
Length
29 pages
Annotation
This study seeks to test the capacity to measure individual agency integrity using the theoretical perspective and police integrity instrument developed by Klockars and colleagues.
Abstract
This study seeks to test the capacity to measure individual agency integrity using the theoretical perspective and police integrity instrument developed by Klockars and colleagues. Specifically, sworn officers in a large U.S. municipal law enforcement agency evaluated 11 vignettes describing various forms of police misconduct, from police corruption and the use of excessive force to perjury and planting of evidence. Although this study in Rainless West yields a picture of police integrity that is largely similar to those reported for the three police agencies participating in the study by Klockars and colleagues, the authors detect substantial differences in the levels of integrity associated with the least serious forms of misconduct. Rainless West offers a lesson for institutions seeking to raise police accountability to explore integrity not only as it applies to the most serious forms of misconduct, but also as it applies to the least serious forms of misconduct. Abstract published by arrangement with Sage Journals.