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Change and Continuity in Police Organizations: Institution, Legitimacy, and Democratization

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posted on 2021-06-18, 01:06 authored by Wonhyuk ChoWonhyuk Cho
This article analyzes how institutional pressures have allowed for continuities as well as brought about changes in modern police organizations in Korea. When facing a legitimacy crisis, the Korean law enforcement system has typically responded with organizational restructuring. Strong myth-building patterns compensate for the lack of moral legitimacy of the police, particularly under authoritarian-military regimes that suppress democratization movements in Korea. Even after seemingly radical organizational changes aimed at placing the police under democratic control, highly institutionalized core structures of the police remain in place. Performance reform after the economic crisis, which was proceeded from reformers’ shared belief in the market-driven solutions, diagnosed the Korean police as a big, inefficient, and self-serving bureaucracy, a diagnosis that eventually caused gradual deterioration in the taken-for-grantedness of policing activities. The internet and social media made the Korean police even more vulnerable to external challenges and a questioning of its legitimacy.

History

Preferred citation

Cho, W. (2017). Change and Continuity in Police Organizations: Institution, Legitimacy, and Democratization. Korean Journal of Policy Studies, 32(1), 149-174. http://hdl.handle.net/10371/134789

Journal title

Korean Journal of Policy Studies

Volume

32

Issue

1

Publication date

2017-04-01

Pagination

149-174 (256)

Publication status

Published

Contribution type

Article

Online publication date

2017-07-21

ISSN

1225-5017

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