ORA - Open Research Area

Police Accountability-towards international standards – POLACS (ES T011769 1)

Submission summary

Against the backdrop of increased powers and resources attributed to police agencies for combating terrorism and other newly perceived threats in many mature democracies, the POLACS project compares levels of empowerment for citizens through accountability mechanism (independent oversight bodies, police complaints procedures and similar schemes). Additional police powers, technologies and transnational police networks add to the already far-reaching powers that police agencies have, granting the police new and powerful ways of monitoring and interfering in citizens’ lives and thus their fundamental rights. Yet, it often proved very difficult to get reform of police complaints procedures onto the political agenda. Today, with audio-video recording equipment becoming ubiquitous and with conflictual encounters between police and members of the public disseminated instantly via the internet, the issue has moved from the fringes to the mainstream as a live political issue.
Researchers from Canada, France, Germany, the UK, and Japan will be cooperating in the POLACS project. The research also covers other countries with well-established police oversight bodies, e.g. Australia, the US and the Netherlands. In the light of persistent public concerns in many democratic countries about effective police accountability, particularly in cases of death or serious injury to members of the public, there is an urgent need to improve the empirical basis for comparison of police accountability schemes and to develop international standards for ‘good practice’. The project also includes the accountability of transnational policing within institutional frameworks such as Interpol or the European Union’s Area of Freedom, Security and Justice, and in transnational police networks. For transnational policing, mostly situated outside national parliamentary oversight and access to justice, accountability can be perceived as particularly deficient.
The academic investigators involved in the POLACS project, with their theoretical and empirical expertise on police accountability will revise and adapt current accountability theories and standards to the empirical reality that has been in rapid development since the 1990s. The methodological approach is comparative as the most effective way to contextualise performance of national and sub-national schemes and a necessary basis for developing international standards for ‘good practice’. Currently policy-makers, practitioners, and activists involved in reforming police accountability mechanisms face great difficulties in contextualising current schemes with other schemes, past and present, as the available qualitative insights and quantitative data are often not comparable. Only by bringing existing data and knowledge together will it be possible to contextualise existing national and sub-national police accountability schemes and identify what data and insights are currently missing. This again will inform the empirical research undertaken by this project and subsequent research.

Project coordination

Christian Mouhanna (Centre de recherches sociologiques sur le droit et les institutions pénales)

The author of this summary is the project coordinator, who is responsible for the content of this summary. The ANR declines any responsibility as for its contents.

Partner

Université de Kyoto-Sangyo
FOEPS Berlin Berlin School of Economics and Law
Université du Québec à Trois Rivières
CESDIP Centre de recherches sociologiques sur le droit et les institutions pénales
University of Dundee

Help of the ANR 315,645 euros
Beginning and duration of the scientific project: December 2020 - 36 Months

Useful links

Explorez notre base de projets financés

 

 

ANR makes available its datasets on funded projects, click here to find more.

Sign up for the latest news:
Subscribe to our newsletter