1st Edition

Independent Police Accountability Bodies Comparative Perspectives on Complaints Against the Police

346 Pages 18 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book provides a detailed comparative analysis of independent police complaints bodies (IPCBs) in Canada, France, Germany, Japan and the UK. It explores the distinctive political, cultural and institutional contexts shaping police accountability arrangements within each country, as well as the transnational dynamics behind the remarkable proliferation of IPCBs over the past three decades,... Read more

1. Introduction: Independent Police Complaints Handling in International Comparative Contexts
Anja Johansen, Genevieve Lennon, Marc Alain.

2. Mapping the Landscapes of Independent Police Complaints Bodies: Institutional Frameworks and Resourcing
Marc Alain, Genevieve Lennon, Anja Johansen, Chikao Urnaka, Vicky Hébert Brassard, Marie-Theres Piening, Morgane Hérault.

3. Theories and Normative Concepts for Understanding and Comparing Independent Police Complaints Bodies
Christian Mouhanna (†), Hartmut Aden, Genevieve Lennon, Kent Roach, Marc Alain, Anja Johansen.

4. Institutional Context and Independence of Police Accountability Bodies: Between Theory and Practice
Hartmut Aden, Yoshiki Kobayashi, Genevieve Lennon, Christian Mouhanna (†).

5. Objectives of Independent Police Complaints Bodies.
Sonja John, Anja Johansen, Morgane Hérault, Koun Kim, Vicky Hébert Brassard.

6, Complaining Against the Police: Historical Perspectives across the 19th and 20th Centuries
Anja Johansen, Jacques de Maillard, René Lévy, Sonja John, Alexander Bosch, Massimiliano Mulone, Chikao Uranaka.

7. Dynamics of Reform: Independent Police Complaints Bodies Since the Turn of the Millennium
Anja Johansen, Jacques de Maillard, Alexander Bosch, Sonja John, René Lévy, Massimiliano Mulone, Chikao Uranaka.

8. Police Accountability Bodies: Institutional Competition or Cooperation?
Christian Mouhanna (†), Genevieve Lennon, Sonja John, Chikao Uranaka.

9. Investigative Powers of Independent Police Complaints Bodies and their Relationship with Criminal Proceedings
Tobias Singelnstein, Genevieve Lennon, Christian Mouhanna (†), Kent Roach.

10. Complainants in the Eyes of the Complaints Practitioners
Amy Long, Massimiliano Mulone, Marie-Theres Piening, Vicky Hébert Brassard.

11. Public Opinion and Independent Police Complaints Bodies: The Knowledge Conundrum.
Marc Alain, Jérémie Gauthier, Koun Kim, Marie-Theres Piening, Vicky Hébert Brassard.

12. New Technologies and Complaints against the Police
Morgane Hérault, Genevieve Lennon, Alexander Bosch.

13. The Dilemmas of Independent Police Complaints Bodies in Democracies
Genevieve Lennon, Marc Alain, Hartmut Aden.

Biography

Anja Johansen is Reader in comparative European history at the University of Dundee. She has published extensively on police-public relations, civil liberties activism, and developments of police accountability in France, Germany, and the UK across the 19th and 20th centuries.

Genevieve Lennon is a senior lecturer of law at the School of Business, Law and Entrepreneurship at Swinburne University. She has published extensively on police law and policy, with a particular interest in accountability and human rights. 

Hartmut Aden is Professor of European and German Public Law, Public Policy and Public Administration at the Berlin School of Economics and Law (HWR Berlin) in the department of Police and Security Management and deputy director of the Berlin Institute for Safety and Security Research (FÖPS Berlin).

Christian Mouhanna (†) was a sociologist and CNRS scholar at the Centre de rescherche sociologique sur le droit et les institutions pénales (CESDIP), France. His extensive, pioneering research and publications cover a range of topics relating to the sociology of policing, security policies, criminal justice, and penal institutions.       

 Marc Alain is Professor at the Department of psychoeducation at the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, Canada, and founder and CEO of the Quebec’s National Police School Research Center (2000-2005). His publications in French and in English cover criminology, in particular juvenile delinquency, and police studies, including contribution to the development of policy and program evaluations in Quebec, Canada, France, Italy and Chili.

Tobias Singelnstein is Professor of criminology and criminal law at Goethe-Universität’s law faculty, with a long research track record on German criminal law and criminal procedure. His publications focus on criminology, notably social control and society, policíng and the judiciary, and security studies.

This volume offers a major contribution to the comparative study of police accountability through its integrated qualitative analysis of Independent Police Complaints Bodies across multiple jurisdictions within five democratic countries. It identifies shared structural dilemmas—concerning independence, authority, resources, and legitimacy—that transcend national and institutional differences. By grounding its empirical findings in international human rights standards, the book advances both conceptual precision and normative debate, making it essential reading for scholars and policymakers engaged in the governance of police oversight.

 Professor Daniela Hunold, Department of Police and Security Management, Berlin School of Economics and Law.

Holding police to account is both more challenging and more pressing than ever before and this collection provides invaluable insight and analysis of international efforts to this end. Using original evidence, the authors analyse not only the formal arrangements of accountability but also the power dynamics and cultural and normative frameworks in which they operate. This is an important evidence base that can help to secure democratic oversight of policing.

Professor Michael Rowe, Northumbria University, UK

The proliferation of "independent" mechanisms for handling citizen complaints against the police is remarkable. Why and how did this innovation emerge? This essential work provides answers based on research from five countries. It highlights the commonalities underlying the diversity of implementations and how the actors involved have responded. An indispensable resource for policing scholars.

Professor Sebastian Roché, CNRS Research Pr., Sciences-Po/University of Grenoble Alpes.