The Public Perception of Police Corruption in Venezuela and its Effect on National Government

Jennifer Marek

Resumo


It is not surprising that many citizens of Latin American countries believe public officials are corrupt. Decades of authoritarian rule, crime, and highly publicized corruption scandals have reduced confidence in many, if not all, government institutions. The public perception of corruption in Venezuela however, presents an intriguing case. Traditional explanations—economic factors, regime stability, and quality of life—are unable to account for the high levels of perceived corruption in government. This author argues, the public perception of police corruption strongly influences the perception of corruption in national government in Venezuela. Using OLS regression, the author statistical analyzes national-level Latinobarómetro data from 2002-2010. The results indicate a strong, significant relationship between perception of police and government corruption.

Palavras-chave


corruption; Venezuela; Latin America; law enforcement

Texto completo:

PDF


DOI: https://doi.org/10.15210/rsulacp.v1i3.3319

DOI (PDF): https://doi.org/10.15210/rsulacp.v1i3.3319.g2754

 Indexadores:

   

Filiação institucional: 

 

Esta revista é de acesso livre. This journal is open access.

ISSN 2317-5338

Qualis CAPES B2 (CP/RI)


shared hosting