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Cultural change and lodestones in the British police

Keith Grint (Department of Organization and Human Resource Management, Warwick Business School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK)
Clare Holt (Department of Organization and Human Resource Management, Warwick Business School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK)
Peter Neyroud (University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK)

International Journal of Emergency Services

ISSN: 2047-0894

Article publication date: 13 November 2017

557

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to consider a challenge to an occupational jurisdiction in the British police. Historically, street cops have defended the importance of operational credibility as a way of sustaining the value of experience, and inhibiting attempts to introduce external leaders. This has generated a particular form of policing and leadership that is deemed by the British Government as inadequate to face the problems of the next decade.

Design/methodology/approach

The project used the High Potential Development Scheme of the British police to assess the value of operational credibility and the possibilities of radical cultural change. Data are drawn from participants on the program, from those who failed to get onto the program, and from officers who have risen through the ranks without access to a fast-track scheme.

Findings

Most organizational changes fail in their own terms, often because of cultural resistance. However, if we change our metaphors of culture from natural to human constructions it may be possible to focus on the key point of the culture: the lodestone that glues it together. Operational credibility may be such a cultural lodestone and undermining it offers the opportunity for rapid and radical change.

Research limitations/implications

The scheme itself has had limited numbers and the research was limited to a small proportion of the different categories outlined above.

Practical implications

If we change our metaphors for culture and cultural change – from natural to constructed metaphors – (icebergs and webs to buildings), it may be possible to consider a much more radical approach to organizational change.

Originality/value

Most assessments of cultural change focus on those charged with enacting the change and explain failure through recourse to natural metaphors of change. This paper challenges the convention that cultural change can only ever be achieved, if at all, through years of effort.

Keywords

Citation

Grint, K., Holt, C. and Neyroud, P. (2017), "Cultural change and lodestones in the British police", International Journal of Emergency Services, Vol. 6 No. 3, pp. 166-176. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJES-03-2017-0013

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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