Title: Citizen satisfaction as indicator of police effectiveness
1Citizen satisfaction as indicator of police
effectiveness
- Ben Vollaard
- CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy
Analysis - September 29, 2006
2Finding out how well the police performwithout
being knowledgeable about police work
sickness absence
citizen satisfaction
response time
fear of crime
detection rate
Do you get where you pay for?
3Outline of presentation
- Why subjective performance assessment?
- How useful a performance indicator is citizen
satisfaction? - Conclusions
4Why subjective assessment?
5Ex ante (objective) vs. Ex post (subjective)
assessment
EW
NL
ex post
ex ante
Define good performance ex ante, rule-based, no
room for subjective judgment
Subjective assessment ex post, incl. customer
satisfaction/ professional judgment
- choice differs between police tasks
6England Wales vs. the Netherlands two styles
of performance assessment
- English approach mostly subjective (incl.
citizen satisfaction and professional judgment),
no overall judgment, comparative - Dutch approach mostly objective, overall
judgment, force-specific
73. How useful a performance indicator is citizen
satisfaction?
8Citizen satisfaction advantages
- Link between broad set of (hard-to-observe)
police actions and safety - The police react on problems in the
neighbourhood - Information on specific hard-to-observe
dimensions of police work - The police dont intervene sufficiently
aggressive
9Reliability of citizens' perceptions
- Do citizens have any idea of police work?
- Patterns in perceived police performance
correspond with anecdotal evidence (overall
performance) and police data (police fining) - Arent citizens responses biased by the local
safety situation? - Across municipalities judgment in (low-crime)
rural areas just as likely to be negative as in
(high-crime) urban areas - Over time 1993-2003, declining crime growing
dissatisfaction with police work
10NL matching two local policing strategies with
survey questions
- Disorder policing dissatisfaction with lack of
proactive/ aggressive police intervention - Hot spots policing is the police visible
in those places where people appreciate it most?
See police too little
See police once a week
11Relation between perceived disorder and hot spots
policing and safety
- Crime and disorder go down more rapidly in
municipalities that follow a pro-active approach
to policing - Tougher, more targeted policing during 2003-2005
reduced disorder by 5, property crime by 3,
violent crime by 2 - Might be underestimation because of simultaneity
that has not been controlled for
12Conclusion
13Do we get value for money?
- Ask customers subjective evaluation of police
strategies and how they contribute to safety - Citizen satisfaction provides meaningful
information on local policing - Relation between citizen satisfaction with police
work and local safety - Citizen satisfaction is a useful performance
indicator for police tasks visible to the public - BCS citizen satisfaction questions currently very
limited
14Dutch Victimisation Survey vs. British Crime
Survey (?)
- Set of questions about police contact of victims
of crime ? - The police do a good job ?
- The police react on problems in the
neighbourhood ! - The police do not intervene sufficiently
forcefully ! - The police are too little visible !
- See the police at least once a week !
- The police offer protection
- The police fine too little
- The police do not arrive quickly when called
- The police get out of the car too little
- The police have too little time for all kinds of
things - The police maintain contact with people in the
nhood - The police are too little approachable
- The police address problems efficiently