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Community policing experience, public trust in the police, citizens’ psychological safety and community well-being in Ghana

Stewart Selase Hevi (Department of Management, Ghana Communication Technology University, Koforidua Campus, Ghana)
Gifty Enyonam Ketemepi (Department of Marketing, University of Professional Studies, Finance, Ghana)
Caroline Dorkoo (Department of Finance, Bond Savings and Loans Ghana Limited, Tema, Ghana)
Akorfa Wuttor (Department of Marketing, University of Professional Studies, Accra, Ghana)

Safer Communities

ISSN: 1757-8043

Article publication date: 25 April 2022

Issue publication date: 6 May 2022

312

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to investigate how community policing experience elicits public trust in the police, citizens’ psychological safety and community well-being in Ghana.

Design/methodology/approach

A cluster sampling technique was used in the selection of 474 community members, who answered questions relating to community policing experience, public trust in the police, citizens’ psychological safety and community well-being. Structural equation modelling was employed to test the relationships and effects of the hypothesized paths.

Findings

The findings showed that community policing experience was positively related to public trust in the police, citizens’ psychological safety and community well-being in Ghana.

Research limitations/implications

Mediation does not fall within the scope of the current study; hence, issues of indirect effects among the variables were not examined. Nevertheless, future studies should consider investigating the phenomenon through mediation analysis.

Practical implications

The study further highlights that probable negative consequences of divulging information to the police about potential or actual crime may hinder citizens from engaging with police. Hence, police administrators must find ways to conceal identities of whistle blowers on crime and its related issues, so they do not suffer any personal cost.

Originality/value

In this research, the academic scope of community policing was expanded by linking the concepts of public trust in police, citizens’ psychological safety and community well-being, which the study admits has been undertaken separately in empirical policing literature but not within the context of developing countries such as Ghana.

Keywords

Citation

Hevi, S.S., Ketemepi, G.E., Dorkoo, C. and Wuttor, A. (2022), "Community policing experience, public trust in the police, citizens’ psychological safety and community well-being in Ghana", Safer Communities, Vol. 21 No. 2, pp. 123-136. https://doi.org/10.1108/SC-08-2021-0032

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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