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Received 4 December 2009
Revised 29 April 2010
Accepted 21 May 2010
Joseph A. Schafer
Department of Criminology & Criminal Justice,
Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, Illinois, USA
Abstract
Purpose Police leaders and leadership remain understudied within existing criminal justice
scholarship. Using data derived from police supervisors participating in the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) National Academy program, the purpose of this paper is to examine effective
leaders and leadership. Specific consideration is given to the traits and habits of effective and
ineffective leaders, the assessment of leadership efficacy, the development of leaders, and the barriers
to the expansion of more effective leaders and leadership in contemporary policing.
Design/methodology/approach Surveys were administered to over 1,000 police supervisors.
Respondents ranked the traits and habits of effective and ineffective leaders, methods to evaluate
leadership efficacy, and barriers to the expansion of more effective leaders and leadership. Though a
convenience sample, the supervisors represent a diverse mix of police agencies of various sizes and
types from around the world.
Findings Ratings suggest respondents saw effective and ineffective leaders as expressing nearly
opposite sets of traits and habits. Efficacy was most strongly linked with integrity, work ethic,
communication, and care for personnel; ineffective leaders were characterized as failing to express
these traits. Respondents cast leadership development as a process best-achieved through a mixture of
training/education, experience, and feedback. Surprisingly, the most highly-rated barriers to the
expansion of effective leaders and leadership practices were not fiscal, but cultural, structural, and
political.
Research limitations/implications Findings suggest key policy implications for police
organizations and the policing profession. Many highly-rated traits and habits may be linked with
personality traits; this could complicate the capacity of leadership development initiatives to enhance
these behaviors. Results suggest development programs need to do more than simply expose students
to a diverse set of theories and perspectives of leadership; mentoring and guided experience were also
rated as helpful. Major barriers to the expansion of effective leadership were not issues easily or
quickly overcome, complicating the long-term prospects of enhancing the quality of leadership within
policing.
Originality/value Given the paucity of systemic and large-scale studies of police leadership, the
findings offer important parameters to guide future research efforts. Though some results validate
what might be assumed about police leadership, that validation is largely absent from the extant
literature. The results provide a starting basis to guide subsequent research assessing the outcomes,
evaluation, and development of police leaders.
Keywords Leadership development, Policing, Leaders
Paper type Research paper
The author thanks the men and women from National Academy sections 226-229 and 232-235 for
their cooperation and candor. Additional thanks to Dr John Jarvis, the FBI Academy Behavioral
Science Unit and the FBI National Academy Unit for their support of this research effort.
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( Jermier and Berkes, 1979; Witte et al., 1990) and tentative evidence supports that
police executives might by similarly open-minded in employing non-traditional
systems (Hoover and Mader, 1990; Tannenbaum and Schmidt, 1958; Steinheider and
Wuestewald, 2008; Zhao et al., 1995).
Extant literature discussing leadership in policing can be generally categorized into
two groups. First, a body of writings (particularly textbooks) has addressed how
general theories of organizations and leadership might be applied within policing
contexts (Adlam and Villiers, 2003; Haberfeld, 2006; Meese and Ortmeier, 2004), often
with little or no empirical validation (Collins, 2005; Domonoske, 2006)[1]. Second,
empirical research has sought to describe how ranked personnel go about engaging in
the acts of leadership, management, and supervision, particularly through the
development of behavioral typologies (Brehm and Gates, 1993; Engel, 2001). Many
studies in this tradition employed limited methodological designs and analytical
techniques, likely contributing to inconsistent findings (see Bass and Riggio, 2006;
Engel, 2002; House and Aditya, 1997). Very little consideration has been given to the
specific behaviors (versus operational styles) of leaders, as well as the assessment and
development of leaders.
Traits and habits
Students and scholars of leadership have long sought to characterize those traits and
habits that undergird the efforts of those deemed to be particularly effective (Burns,
2003). Early studies of leadership tended to focus on the great man/great woman
theory (House and Podsakoff, 1994; Schackleton, 1995); a well regarded leader was
studied in a biographical format to derive an understanding of their success. Over time,
studies expanded this approach to consider samples of recognized leaders (e.g.
Kirkpatrick and Locke, 1991). Though research has not always found clear causal links
between a given trait and leadership efficacy (Bass, 1990; Burns, 2003), trait-based
thinking still dominates both leadership scholarship and corporate leadership
literature (Collins, 2001; Kouzes and Posner, 2002; Maxwell, 2005).
Scholarship considering police leaders has focused on formal supervisors (who may
or may not exemplify leadership behaviors) rather than on leaders (who may or may
not hold supervisory positions) (Cohen, 1980; Pursley, 1974; Van Maanen, 1983). Engel
(2001, 2002) offers broad categorizations of supervisory styles (e.g. traditional,
innovative, supportive, and active), an approach helpful in establishing typologies of
supervisory styles to support quantitative studies, particularly efforts to assess how
leadership styles link with outcomes. As with any typology, however, there is risk that
categories must be constructed in a broad fashion to support analytical efforts. As a
consequence less is understood about the importance of the individual traits and habits
upon which categories are based.
Kellerman (2004b) critiques the prevailing tendency to frame leadership as a
benevolent process, noting this constricts understanding the realities of leadership. She
and others contend leaders may have limitations, employ less-than-ideal means, and
are ineffective, at least in part, while still generally achieving their objectives (Bailey,
1988). In the past two decades leadership scholars have begun to consider leaders from
a different perspective by examining those who have failed, derailed, or exemplify
the dark side of leadership (Clements and Washbush, 1999; Einarsen et al., 2007;
Gardner, 1990; Kellerman, 2000, 2004a; Kets de Vries, 1993). Those examining
ineffective leadership contend recognizing and discussing failures and limitations will
help make leaders more effective. Such consideration has focused on the leadership and
personal shortcomings of corporate executives (Einarsen et al. 2007; Finkelstein, 2003;
Kellerman, 2004a,b; McCall and Lombardo, 1983; McCauley, 2004; Schackleton, 1995;
Swartz and Watkins, 2003) and government officeholders (Barras, 1998; Stanton, 2003).
Largely absent from this body of scholarship is consideration of poor leadership within
policing contexts.
Assessing efficacy
Leadership efficacy is an elusive concept, in part because perspectives on whether a
leader and his/her behaviors are effective have a subjective element. One persons
self-centered egotist is another persons confident visionary. In addition, the
assessment of leadership efficacy is a methodologically and conceptually difficult
process (Clark and Clark, 1990; Howard, 2007; London et al., 2007). Across policing and
other occupational contexts researchers have used a variety of definitions, methods,
and measures, contributing to the chaotic, contradictory, and inconsistent findings
(Bass, 1990). The assessment of leadership efficacy is particularly complex in policing
given the absence of clearly accepted objectives agencies themselves are expected to
achieve. This ambiguity complicates the ability to link leadership efficacy with
organizational outcomes or outputs. Nonetheless, formal police leaders (e.g.
supervisors) are expected to influence subordinates and organizational outcomes
(Adlam, 2002; Engel, 2001, 2002; Engel and Worden, 2003; Trojanowicz, 1980) despite
geographic and temporal separation (Brown, 1988; Lipsky, 1980; Lundman, 1979; Van
Maanen, 1983).
In assessing efficacy, supervisory style and influence have been demonstrated
along a number of traditional policing outcomes, including discretionary enforcement
decisions (Allen and Maxfield, 1983; Engel, 2000; Mastrofski et al., 1994; Smith, 1984),
the use of force (Engel, 2000), and officer misconduct (Bittner, 1983; Brehm and Gates,
1993; Brown, 1988; Huberts et al., 2007; Reiss, 1971), though inconstant findings
abound (see, Allen, 1982; Allen and Maxfield, 1983; Brehm and Gates, 1993; Brown,
1988; Engel, 2002; Mastrofski et al., 1994; Muir, 1977; Reiss, 1971; Smith, 1984; Wilson,
1968). More recent and methodological rigorous findings offer stronger evidence that
supervisors influence subordinate personnel (Engel, 2000, 2001, 2002; Engel and
Worden, 2003)[2]. Far less is known about the measurement of leadership efficacy
beyond considerations of officer performance, output, and conduct. What other metrics
might be used and who should provide input on the performance of a given leader;
followers, peers, constituents, supervisors, the leader her/himself (Clark and Clark,
1990)? As indicated in corporate leadership efficacy writings these efforts can be
challenging as expanding our conception and measurement of whether a leader is
effective invokes a number of methodological difficulties (Maxwell, 2005).
Developing and expanding effective leadership
American policing is dominated by small agencies (three-quarters of agencies employ
fewer than 25 sworn officers; see Hickman and Reaves, 2006) regulated by relatively
few standards for structure and operation. Most agencies have little or no formalized
protocols to develop current or future leaders (Anderson et al., 2006; London et al.,
2007). Other training demands and mandates may dominate agency training resources
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leadership skills? Finally, what barriers prevent the expansion of more effective
leadership practices? Salient policy implications are also addressed.
Methodology
The study considers the characteristics, assessment, and development of effective
police leaders and leadership using a consensus approach. Findings are based on
surveys completed by police supervisors attending the FBI National Academy (NA) in
Quantico, Virginia. The NA is a career development experience targeting upwardly
mobile police supervisors in the mid- to later-stages of their career. The ten-week
residential experience is analogous to a supervisor taking a sabbatical from their job to
attend college for a quarter. NA participants enroll in a schedule of classes taught by
FBI personnel, earning credit through the University of Virginia. The FBI allocates a
seat to a particular agency, which ultimately identifies the officer who will fill that seat
and attend the program. NA seats are supposed to be assigned to officers who are of
significant importance to their agency and who are likely to play a future leadership
role in that agency or some other law enforcement setting. That ideal is generally
brought to life, though favoritism and nepotism likely influence how some agencies
assign this opportunity. NA participants are almost exclusively in supervisory
position and agencies are supposed to attest participants will remain employed for at
least three years upon returning to their agency. The NA operates four ten-week
sessions each year. During sessions 232 through 235 (calendar year 2008) surveys were
administered to NA attendees on the first day of each session. Participation was
voluntary; officers were provided written informed consent details and signed a waiver
if they assented to participate. Respondents did not report any personal identifies and
disclosed only limited experiential data.
The survey items were derived from an earlier project also conducted in the NA
(Schafer, 2009) in which participants completed open-ended survey questions
concerning the traits and habits of effective leaders and additional aspects of the
leadership process in policing. Those open-ended results were systematically reviewed
and coded to identify dominant themes (see Lee, 1999; Strauss, 1987). This process
yielded 10-12 common responses provided in narrative characterizations of dimensions
of police leadership (traits and habits of effective leaders, traits and habits of ineffective
leaders, metrics to assess leadership efficacy, and barrier to the expansion of effective
leadership in policing). Rather than being asked to provide qualitative descriptions of
these key dimensions, officers in sessions 232 through 235 were asked to review the
lists of dominant themes and identify (in ranked order) the five most important
elements (i.e. to rank the 1st through 5th trait or habit that contribute to leadership
efficacy)[5]. This process advances beyond general descriptions of leadership
dimensions by seeking to determine which elements are most salient along each
dimension of leadership. Rather than describing the traits and habits of effective
leaders, the results reported in this analysis rank the traits and habits identified as
being most important to leadership efficacy based on a consensus approach. In
addition, using a Likert-based response set participants were asked to assess the utility
of common methods to that might be used to develop leaders. The list of included items
represented a cross-section of the common educational, training, and mentoring tools
advocated in both general (Bass, 1990; Bass and Riggio, 2006; Day and OConnor, 2003;
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Mumford and Manley, 2003) and police-specific (Anderson et al., 2006; IACP, n.d.)
leadership development literature.
Across the four sessions included in this project, 1,042 of the 1,071 (97.3 percent) NA
attendees completed all or part of the survey. Though the NA is not a random sample
of either police officers or police supervisors, as a convenience sample it is still of
interest and relevance in considering elements of police leadership. Because the
majority of participants are supervisors and are among the elite in their employee
agency, they represent a sample which has likely given considerable attention to
leadership and its development, both in their personal experiences and within the
context of their employing agency. Though based on a convenience sample the data
provide unique insight into a cross-section of American law enforcement with a
richness of diversity and experiences that would be difficult and expensive to obtain
through more systematic sampling approaches. While the data might render
questionable an explanatory analysis, descriptive consideration of themes and trends
remain viable.
Findings
The average project participants reported 19.3 years of police experience (range 0-43
years of service) and 9.7 years of supervisory experience (range 0-28 years)[6]. As such,
the respondents represent a sample with a robust history of general and supervisory
experiences in policing. The majority of respondents (91.4 percent) were American.
Nearly one-quarter (23.7 percent) reported having prior military service; of those, the
average duration was 7.1 years in the armed forces (range 0-36 years). The participants
reported a relatively high degree of education. Nearly all had some college education,
with two-thirds reporting completion at or beyond the bachelors level and nearly
one-quarter reporting a graduate or law degree (see Table I). The sample
under-represents municipal and other (i.e. special jurisdiction) agencies, while
over-representing state agencies (Hickman and Reaves, 2006)[7]. The sample also
Education
(n 958)
Agency type
(n 998)
Agency size
(n 999)
Table I.
Respondent education,
agency type and agency
size
High School/GED
Some college
Associates degree
Bachelors degree
Some graduate/law work
Graduate/law degree
Municipal/city
County
State
Federal
Other
0-50
51-100
101-250
251-1000
1001+
Frequency
Percentage
36
182
91
296
116
237
545
198
146
65
44
263
178
161
215
182
3.8
19.0
9.5
30.8
12.1
24.7
54.6
19.8
14.6
6.5
4.4
26.3
17.8
16.1
21.5
18.2
Notes: Frequencies do not sum to 1,042 due to missing cases. Valid percentages are reported
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1st
(%)
2nd
(%)
3rd
(%)
4th
(%)
5th
(%)
% ranking
in top five
37.5
8.9
11.1
9.3
3.0
4.9
7.0
2.0
6.2
1.0
1.7
0.8
11.1
11.3
13.2
11.2
8.4
8.1
7.5
8.7
6.0
3.5
4.4
2.3
9.9
11.9
10.2
9.0
11.5
9.1
7.1
7.7
7.0
5.1
4.6
3.9
7.0
10.1
8.7
8.4
8.8
9.5
9.0
8.6
6.6
6.7
3.6
4.7
4.3
11.5
7.6
5.7
11.2
9.0
8.8
9.0
6.9
6.6
5.3
4.7
69.8
53.6
50.9
43.6
42.9
40.5
39.4
36.0
32.8
22.8
19.6
16.4
Table II.
Top five characteristics
contributing to police
leader efficacy
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Table III.
Top five characteristics
contributing to police
leader inefficacy
Ineffective communication
Neglects needs of workers
Questionable ethics and integrity
Poor work ethic
Inability to delegate
Failure to act
Unwillingness to change
Belief they know everything
Poor comprehension of job
Unwillingness to compromise
Inability to accept criticism
Lack of focus
1st
(%)
2nd
(%)
3rd
(%)
4th
(%)
5th
(%)
% ranking
in top five
15.8
8.5
32.5
5.9
3.5
5.2
2.4
7.0
7.4
2.3
1.8
0.9
15.1
15.5
10.4
8.3
7.3
5.7
4.8
7.0
7.9
4.5
4.4
2.3
13.8
15.9
7.0
7.5
8.2
7.9
8.1
6.5
6.2
6.3
6.6
2.9
10.1
10.0
6.1
7.3
9.0
8.8
9.2
7.1
5.6
6.6
6.9
3.7
9.5
12.2
5.9
6.6
7.6
7.5
9.3
5.8
5.7
7.8
7.2
3.4
64.3
62.1
62.0
35.6
35.5
35.1
33.8
33.4
32.7
27.5
26.9
13.2
leadership was generally the other side of the coin relative to effective leaders.
Paralleling the effective leadership list (Table II) the dominant elements are aligned
with a leaders personality and interpersonal relations with peers and subordinates
over technical competencies of supervision. The distinction between effective and
ineffective leaders seems more a function of how they do their job versus the
mechanical aspects of their performance. In other words, what appeared to matter most
in making a leader ineffective is not what they do (or fail do), but rather how they
perform their duties, their personal integrity, and their interpersonal relationships.
Assessing leadership efficacy
Respondents were asked to rank the five most important pieces of evidence (out of ten)
that might be used to assessing a leaders efficacy. Table IV provides the outcome of
that ranking process. The items ranked more highly in this processes were split
between what might be considered the technical and the interpersonal outcomes of
leadership. The majority of respondents included evidence of technical
accomplishments such as the leader achieving key goals (ranked in the top five by
72.1 percent of respondents and rated most important by 25.1 percent) and whether
Table IV.
Top five indicators to
assess leader efficacy
1st
(%)
2nd
(%)
3rd
(%)
4th
(%)
5th
(%)
% ranking
in top five
25.1
21.9
11.5
17.4
17.3
5.8
4.5
0.5
0.0
0.2
15.6
20.5
16.0
27.1
11.4
9.0
6.7
1.1
0.7
0.8
12.2
23.1
17.0
22.4
12.3
10.1
8.1
2.2
1.7
2.6
11.4
19.3
13.2
19.2
8.3
10.6
9.6
3.6
3.1
2.3
7.8
15.2
9.5
13.8
11.2
10.6
12.1
4.5
6.2
3.2
72.1
69.2
67.2
65.3
60.4
46.2
40.9
12.0
11.7
9.0
subordinates achieved their goals (ranked in the top five by 65.3 percent). At the same
time, primacy was also placed on items reflecting the interpersonal dynamics of the
workplace, including the growth and development of subordinates, positive
subordinate morale, and the leader having positive standing in the agency. Results
lend support for blended and holistic approaches to assessing and evaluating leader
efficacy within police organizations.
The development of effective leadership
Respondents evaluated whether common leadership development strategies were
likely to be helpful to someone participating in a police leadership development
program (Table V). In general respondents perceived some utility in all of the common
elements associated with police leadership development; for each strategy more than
three-quarters of respondents rated the approach as at least a little helpful. Training
and feedback were highly regarded approaches, with more than half of respondents
assessing those strategies as very helpful and nearly all respondents assessing them
as at least helpful. Feedback was highly ranked not only for current supervisors, but
also to support the development of officers who might eventually achieve supervisory
positions. Leadership experiences, education, mentoring, networking, and
incorporating leadership practices from other fields were well regarded, with at least
half of respondents rating these strategies as very helpful or helpful. The
remaining items (books, reports and journal articles) were rated as being less helpful,
though all were ranked a little helpful by around half of the respondents.
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Very
helpful
Helpful
A little
helpful
Not at all
helpful
58.9
38.3
2.7
0.1
58.6
55.9
49.5
47.8
42.7
33.5
17.1
7.3
4.6
4.5
36.6
42.1
47.2
47.2
44.2
50.1
49.0
35.5
24.6
32.3
4.7
1.8
3.3
4.9
12.4
15.4
32.0
49.2
55.8
51.1
0.1
0.1
0.0
0.1
0.7
0.9
1.7
8.0
15.0
12.1
2.6
21.2
55.0
21.2
Table V.
Assessment of common
leadership development
strategies
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Table VI.
Top five constraints on
the expansion of effective
leadership practices
Resistance to change
Politics
Inadequate leadership development system
Failure to provide true leadership
Standards & selection
Ego
Lack of qualified personnel
Lack funds for training
Absence of leadership development system
Influence of labor orgs
Lack of available training
1st
(%)
2nd
(%)
3rd
(%)
4th
(%)
5th
(%)
% ranking
in top five
18.3
10.7
10.1
12.0
5.9
8.2
7.8
7.6
5.8
1.8
1.8
16.3
9.6
13.3
9.8
8.6
8.4
6.4
7.2
6.5
2.8
1.6
12.9
11.7
9.6
8.5
9.3
7.6
7.3
7.5
6.8
4.2
4.0
11.7
10.1
6.7
8.1
10.9
6.2
7.0
5.4
4.4
3.4
2.5
8.8
7.3
7.5
6.4
6.9
8.0
6.8
5.7
4.5
4.2
2.7
68.0
49.3
47.1
44.8
41.7
38.5
35.2
33.2
28.1
16.5
12.6
Rather, the dominant constraints related with the culture (resistance to change, politics,
and failure to provide true leadership) and structures (ineffective leadership
development systems and inferior standards and selections) that dominate American
policing. This represents a mixed outcome for the expansion of effective leadership,
suggesting policing must do more than modify resource streams and protocols; the
profession must also overcome perceived resistance, the existing absence of leadership,
and ego.
Discussion
The development of effective leaders and leadership practices are persistent problems
in policing. Though examples abound describing departments and supervisors that
excel in this regard, various anecdotal evidence reported in this study and by other
scholars suggest circumstances might still be improved. Understanding the
characteristics of effective and ineffective leaders serves as an important starting
point in the process; these two groupings help define the end state developmental
efforts need to pursue. The highly ranked characteristics on both lists tend to mirror
one another, as perhaps should be expected. It is understandable that ineffective
leaders were characterized as suffering from questionable ethics and integrity,
particularly given the primacy placed on those attributes in the ratings of effective
leaders. Effective leaders had strong character, cared for their employees, worked hard,
and were successful communicators. Ineffective leaders had questionable character,
neglected the needs of workers, displayed a poor work ethic, and failed to
communicate. These lists validate much of the extant literature on effective and
ineffective leaders, both within (Engel, 2001, 2002) and outside (Bass, 1990; Burns,
2003; Collins, 2001; Kellerman, 2004a; Kouzes and Posner, 2002; Lord et al., 1986;
Maxwell, 2005) of policing contexts. This validation is important because unlike most
prior research it is derived from a diverse convenience sample of officers representing a
broad cross section of police organizations. Where prior studies have largely been
restricted to no more than a handful of agencies, these data are derived from
supervisors who work in agencies that vary in size, jurisdiction, and mandate. This
validation lends further credence to the belief that effective police leadership is about
character, communication, compassion, and work ethic.
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chance to practice their leadership skills, and would be given feedback to enhance
application of knowledge and skills. Such an approach would certainly require the
investment of resources and effort on the part of an agency, but informal discussions
with NA participants suggest it is an informal practice in many agencies and by many
current leaders. In other words, though an agency might not offer a formal leadership
development program, a good leader (recognizing the need to develop the leaders of
tomorrow) will encourage front-line personnel to read and attend elective leadership
training. Where possible, that leader might also allow officers to take charge of critical
incidents, investigations, or administrative matters to provide leadership experience.
Whether a more systematized model would yield favorable outcomes remains
unresolved in current policing scholarship.
In considering the barriers to the expansion of effective leaders and leadership it is
perhaps unsurprising the list of factors tends to mirror common barriers to change in
policing (see Guyot, 1991; OHara, 2005; Sherman et al., 1973). Though budgetary
limitations are often presumed to be a key barrier to expansion and development
efforts, many other obstacles received higher rankings from respondents. The barriers
respondents identified characterized the major barriers as being cultural (resistance to
change and politics) and structural (the absence of effective leadership development
systems). In addition, respondents expressed the development of leadership was
impeded by the current absence of leadership. Presumably, to see a need to change
current practices requires a leader and leadership initiative; if those in control of an
agency do not have the vision and will to modify leadership development approaches,
such modifications are unlikely to materialize. The trailing significance of fiscal
resources represents a challenge for efforts to enhance leadership within the policing
profession. If money were the key limitation, external initiatives could overcome that
barrier. Culture, politics, structure, and inertia might be more difficult to overcome.
It must be conceded that these study findings are based on a convenience sample of
police leaders. Though the sample is rich and diverse in representing agencies of
differing sizes, jurisdictions, and missions, the generalizability of the findings is
unclear. Respondents were supervisors and, for the most part, were supposed to be key
or up-and-coming actors in their agency; the experiences and perspectives of front-line
personnel might differ. In addition, the characteristics of effective and ineffective
leaders are based on a consensus model of perceptions, rather than an objective
evaluation of how traits might translate into specific outcomes. The present research
does not attempt to empirically link the extent to which leaders reflect those
characteristics and their subsequent leadership outcomes. What the data do capture
are experiences and perceptions, but not a systematic evaluation of any particular trait,
habit, obstacle, or leadership development tool. Nonetheless, the data offer guidance for
subsequent research efforts that might seek to systematically study these aspects of
leadership using more representative samples.
Implications
Findings from this study present key implications for both police practitioners and
scholars. From the standpoint of practitioners there are several challenges associated
with developing and expanding effective leadership. First, though the use of training
programs is often the immediate response to any policing problem, valid arguments
can be constructed to be skeptical that such training will yield desired outcomes (see
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rarely selected, accounting for approximately 0.5 percent of the provided ratings. No
consistent patterns of responses emerged and the other responses are omitted from
consideration here due to their low prevalence and diverse nature.
6. Though the National Academy was designed for sworn police supervisors, in a small
proportion of cases admission was granted to non-sworn supervisory personnel,
non-supervisory personnel, or recently promoted personnel. In such cases, participants
might report zero years of policing experience and/or zero years of supervisory experience.
Such cases account for 20 of the 1,042 respondents (1.9 percent).
7. The Bureau of Justice Statistics classifications only place state police agencies within the
state agency category; state-level investigative entities are not included in this
classification. It is possible those working for the latter (i.e. state narcotics bureaus)
self-identified as a state agency rather than as a special jurisdiction agency. Thus, the skew
may be a function of differing classifications rather than an actual difference in
representativeness.
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Further reading
Kelloway, E.K., Sivanathan, N., Francis, L. and Barling, J. (2005), Poor leadership, in Barling, J.,
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National Research Council, CLAJ and DBASSE (2004), Fairness and Effectiveness in Policing:
The Evidence, edited by Skogan, W. and Frydl, K., The National Academies Press,
Washington, DC.
About the author
Joseph A. Schafer is Associate Professor and Graduate Program Director in the Department of
Criminology & Criminal Justice at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. His research focuses
on policing, organizational change, leadership, communities and crime, citizen perceptions of
police, and futures research in policing. Joseph A. Schafer can be contacted at: jschafer@siu.edu
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