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Rotten Orchards: "Pestilence", Police Misconduct and System Failure*

Rotten Orchards: "Pestilence", Police Misconduct and System Failure* The literature on police corruption tends to be dominated by North American studies of widespread "grass-eating". By contrast, this article examines scandals in three European societies (Belgium, the Netherlands and Great Britain) requiring analysis at the system level. In all of these instances, police deviance was unlike much of that in North America: there was either gross failure in the system to perform adequately or systemic rule-bending to achieve formal or informal institutional ends. The cases reveal that misconduct and/or failure to perform fostered significant scandals that implicated others within the criminal justice system and even beyond it. Understanding such upheavals requires cross-cultural attention to the specific social-political context. In addition, reform of police and justice agencies after major scandal demands proposals at the system level. Institutions often rationalize excesses with the "rotten apple" metaphor (human failure is the cause and can be swiftly rectified by removal). Here, the systemic emphasis is conveyed by the alternative metaphor of "rotten orchards". http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Policing & Society Taylor & Francis

Rotten Orchards: "Pestilence", Police Misconduct and System Failure*

Policing & Society , Volume 13 (2): 26 – Jan 1, 2003
26 pages

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References (61)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
1477-2728
eISSN
1043-9463
DOI
10.1080/10439460308026
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The literature on police corruption tends to be dominated by North American studies of widespread "grass-eating". By contrast, this article examines scandals in three European societies (Belgium, the Netherlands and Great Britain) requiring analysis at the system level. In all of these instances, police deviance was unlike much of that in North America: there was either gross failure in the system to perform adequately or systemic rule-bending to achieve formal or informal institutional ends. The cases reveal that misconduct and/or failure to perform fostered significant scandals that implicated others within the criminal justice system and even beyond it. Understanding such upheavals requires cross-cultural attention to the specific social-political context. In addition, reform of police and justice agencies after major scandal demands proposals at the system level. Institutions often rationalize excesses with the "rotten apple" metaphor (human failure is the cause and can be swiftly rectified by removal). Here, the systemic emphasis is conveyed by the alternative metaphor of "rotten orchards".

Journal

Policing & SocietyTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 2003

Keywords: Police Corruption And Reform; System Failure; Miscarriages Of Justice (Britain); Dutroux Case (Belgium); Irt Case (the Netherlands)

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