4th Edition

Police Ethics The Corruption of Noble Cause

    366 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    366 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Police Ethics, Fourth Edition, provides an analysis of corruption in law enforcement organizations. The authors argue that the noble cause—a commitment to “doing something about bad people”—is a central “ends-based” police ethic. This fundamental principle of police ethics can paradoxically open the way to community polarization and increased violence, however, when officers violate the law on behalf of personally held moral values. This book is about the power that police use to do their work and how it can lead police to abuse their positions at the individual and organizational levels. It provides students of policing with a realistic understanding of the kinds of problems they will confront in the practice of police work.

    This timely new edition offers police administrators direction for developing agency-wide corruption prevention strategies, and a re-written chapter further expands our level of understanding of corruption by covering the Model of Circumstantial Corruptibility in detail. The fourth edition also discusses critical ethical issues relating to the relationship between police departments and minority communities, including Black Lives Matter and other activist groups. In the post-Ferguson environment, this is a crucial text for students, academicians, and law enforcement professionals alike.

    Part 1: Value-Based Decision-Making and the Ethics of Noble Cause

    1. Value-Based Decision-Making: Understanding the Ethics of Noble Cause

    2. Values, Hiring, and Early Organizational Experiences

    3. Values and Administrative Dilemmas

    4. The Social Psychology of Cops’ Values

    Part 2: Noble-Cause Corruption

    5. From Economic to Noble-Cause Corruption

    6. Stress, Organizational Accountability, and the Noble Cause

    7. Ethics and the Means-Ends Dilemma

    8. Police Culture, Ends-Orientation, and Noble-Cause Corruption

    Part 3: Ethics and Police in a Time of Change

    9. Policing Citizens, Policing Communities: Toward an Ethic of Negotiated Order

    10. The Stakes

    11. Recommendations

    12. Conclusion: The Noble Cause

    Biography

    Michael A. Caldero was a former Police Officer who presented seminars on the subject of police ethics to police commanders across the United States. He taught in the Department of Administration of Criminal Justice at Bellevue College.

    Dr. Jeffrey D. Dailey is an Associate Professor of Border Security and Intelligence at Angelo State University. Prior to this he performed classified computer-aided military intelligence signal analysis (SIGINT) with active duty Army and Air Force intelligence units in several locations.

    Dr. Brian L. Withrow is a Professor of Criminal Justice at Texas State University. Prior to joining the Texas State University faculty in 2009, Brian was an Associate Professor and Director of Forensic Sciences at Wichita State University.