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A criminological examination of police criminality

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Title: A criminological examination of police criminality
Author: Grobler, Elizabeth
Abstract: The primary objective of this research was to study and explain police criminality from a criminological point of view. Police criminality was addressed from a scientific perspective and this was achieved by using scientific measures and procedures including theoretical explanations and recognised research methodology. The secondary objectives included the undertaking of a comprehensive literature study on police criminality in addition to conducting interviews with specialists in order to gain expert information from knowledgeable sources in the field of police criminality. Interviews conducted with police offenders addressed police criminality from the viewpoint of the individual offender. The findings of the empirical study reflect significant individual and organisational factors. The individual factors highlighted characteristics such as power, greed, aggression, feelings of invincibility, gullibility, propensity to criminality and psychological factors including Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, which contributed to crimes committed by police members. Perhaps the most significant organisational contributors highlighted by this study related to managerial shortcomings. It is evident that police organisations with high levels of untrained, inexperienced and incompetent managers experience high levels of internal criminality. Poor supervision and the lack of corruption controls create an enabling environment for the perpetuation of police deviance. Additional organisational factors that encourage criminality include negative aspects of police culture such as the code of silence, where police members are more apt to protecting corrupt colleagues than reporting them. The lack of discipline gives rise to insubordination and familiarity, which encourages impunity. In the South African Police Service at present, the policy of Affirmative Action is causing widespread dissatisfaction and the lowering of morale amongst certain members. Inadequate recruitment and training do not prepare members adequately for their job and it literally allow the "worm into the apple." The researcher's contribution to this study is an interventionist model, which contains essential recommendations primarily for the benefit of the South African Police Service. These include the expeditious implementation of a comprehensive anti-corruption strategy and the creation of an independent investigation unit. Management shortcomings must be rectified and professionalism encouraged. Recruits need to be thoroughly vetted and ethics and integrity must be included in police training.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1530
Date: 2009-08-25
Citation:


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03summary.pdf 10.91Kb PDF View/Open
14chapter10.pdf 216.4Kb PDF View/Open
06listoftables.pdf 6.754Kb PDF View/Open
13chapter9.pdf 254.4Kb PDF View/Open
16bibliography.pdf 35.89Kb PDF View/Open
15chapter11.pdf 118.0Kb PDF View/Open
00titlepage.pdf 6.361Kb PDF View/Open
01declaration.pdf 6.790Kb PDF View/Open
11chapter7.pdf 141.1Kb PDF View/Open
07chapter1.pdf 106.6Kb PDF View/Open
04quotations.pdf 9.632Kb PDF View/Open
02acknowledgements.pdf 7.301Kb PDF View/Open
09chapters3to5.pdf 567.9Kb PDF View/Open
05contents.pdf 37.94Kb PDF View/Open

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