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Police Integrity in Armenia

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Measuring Police Integrity Across the World

Abstract

The Armenian police are a centralized police agency adjunct to the Government of Armenia. This chapter explores the contours of police integrity among the Armenian police officers. The chapter relies on the police integrity survey conducted in 2013. The sample of 969 police officers evaluated hypothetical scenarios describing various forms of police misconduct. We analyze the results across several measures of police integrity, such as the police officers’ knowledge of official rules, evaluations of the seriousness of police misconduct, views about appropriate and expected discipline, and the code of silence. The results show that most of our respondents recognized behaviors described in the hypothetical scenarios as rule violating and evaluated them to be serious. On the other hand, they thought that only lenient discipline is appropriate for such forms of misconduct. At the same time, they mostly expected their police agencies to mete out lenient discipline, indicating the presence of a relaxed disciplinary environment. Finally, our findings detect the presence of a strong code of silence, providing protection even for the behaviors evaluated to be rule violating and very serious.

Aleksandr Khechumyan has conducted the police integrity research as a part of his nonresidential Network Fellowship at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Transparency International reports that, although the laws on public access to information apply equally to the police and other public entities, the police deny to provide any disciplinary data and refer to confidentiality of requested information as a valid reason for refusing to provide them (Transparency International 2003).

  2. 2.

    The chi-square test of independence is statistically significant for all 11 scenarios, rejecting the null hypothesis of statistical independence. Similarly, the phi coefficients suggest that the expressed views of appropriate and expected discipline are related.

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Correspondence to Aleksandr Khechumyan .

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Khechumyan, A., Kutnjak Ivković, S. (2015). Police Integrity in Armenia. In: Kutnjak Ivković, S., Haberfeld, M. (eds) Measuring Police Integrity Across the World. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2279-6_2

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