The Generalizability of Police Legitimacy: Procedural Justice, Legitimacy, and Speeding Intention of South Korean Drivers

被引:0
作者
Yeon Soo Kim
Kwang Hyun Ra
Kyle McLean
机构
[1] Dongguk University,Department of Transdisciplinary Policing Science
[2] Dongguk University,Institute of Transdisciplinary Studies for the Future
[3] Florida State University,College of Criminology and Criminal Justice
来源
Asian Journal of Criminology | 2019年 / 14卷
关键词
Procedural justice; Police legitimacy; Speeding intention; South Korean drivers; Perception of police;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Empirical support for procedural justice theory in criminology is robust in the developed Western countries, whereas the results are mixed for non-Western or less-developed countries. Some scholars (e.g., Reisig et al. Journal of Criminal Justice and Security, 14(2), 147–164, 2012) argue that the generalizability of procedural justice theory may be limited to particular sociological settings, such as democratic and industrialized societies. The current study aims to review the international generalizability of the theory and to test the theory utilizing a South Korean driver sample. The results show that procedural fairness predicted legitimacy and speeding intention. However, perceived legitimacy does not mediate the association between perceived procedural fairness and speeding intention for Korean drivers. Considering the findings from the current study and previous studies, it seems that industrialization may not be a sufficient condition linking perceived legitimacy and compliance, but democracy may be the most significant precursor for the theory to work.
引用
收藏
页码:41 / 59
页数:18
相关论文
共 124 条
  • [1] Akinlabi OM(2017)Young people, procedural justice and police legitimacy in Nigeria Policing and Society 27 419-438
  • [2] Baron RM(1986)The moderator–mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations’ Journal of personality and social psychology 51 1173-1182
  • [3] Kenny DA(2014)Self-legitimacy, police culture and support for democratic policing in an English constabulary British Journal of Criminology 54 1023-1046
  • [4] Bradford B(2014)What price fairness when security is at stake? Police legitimacy in South Africa Regulation & Governance 8 246-268
  • [5] Quinton P(2015)Obeying the rules of the road: Procedural justice, social identity, and normative compliance’ Journal of contemporary criminal justice 31 171-191
  • [6] Bradford B(1980)Toward a theory of State intervention: the nationalization of the British telegraphs Social Science History 4 155-205
  • [7] Huq A(2015)Prosecutorial procedural justice and public legitimacy in Hong Kong British Journal of Criminology 57 94-111
  • [8] Jackson J(1997)On scope conditions Small Group Research 28 535-555
  • [9] Roberts B(1991)The police, space and society: the geography of policing Progress in Human Geography 15 249-267
  • [10] Bradford B(2011)The convergent and discriminant validity of procedural justice and police legitimacy: An empirical test of core theoretical propositions Journal of Criminal Justice 39 489-498