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Policing and Society
An International Journal of Research and Policy
Volume 31, 2021 - Issue 6
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Articles

Social integration and confidence in the police: a cross-national multi-level analysis

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Pages 751-766 | Received 02 Oct 2019, Accepted 30 Mar 2020, Published online: 08 Apr 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Building on the insight of Durkheim, the current study examines the hypothesis that cross-national proxies for social integration explain variation in confidence in the police across different countries. Combining six sources of data from 84 nations with a total sample size of 122,330 respondents, the current research uses hierarchical generalised linear modelling (HGLM) logistic regression analyses to investigate the potential mechanism of social integration in shaping confidence in the police. Results show that three proxies of social integration (i.e. homicide rates, group grievance, and suicide rates) are negatively and significantly associated with confidence in the police. Additionally, results replicated the U-shaped convex curvilinear relationship between democracy and police confidence. Durkheim’s notion of social integration can offer a theoretical framework to account for the effects of country-level variables on confidence in the police across cultural boundaries.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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