OpenGov Research

About Repository Blog Digest Learn & Connect

Citizen Engagement and Crowdsourcing

4/20/2015

Does Twitter Increase Perceived Police Legitimacy?

Stephan G. Grimmelikhuijsen, Albert J. Meijer

Social media use has become increasingly popular among police forces. The literature suggests that social media use can increase perceived police legitimacy by enabling transparency and participation. Employing data from a large and representative survey of Dutch citizens (N = 4,492), this article tests whether and how social media use affects perceived legitimacy for a major social media platform, Twitter. A negligible number of citizens engage online with the police, and thus the fi ndings reveal no positive relationship between participation and perceived legitimacy. The article shows that by enhancing transparency, Twitter does increase perceived police legitimacy, albeit to a limited extent. Subsequent analysis of the mechanism shows both an affective and a cognitive path from social media use to legitimacy. Overall, the findings suggest that establishing a direct channel with citizens and using it to communicate successes does help the police strengthen their legitimacy, but only slightly and for a small group of interested citizens.

Related Content

PAR 75.41 - Does Twitter Increase Perceived Police Legitimacy? (Podcast)

Meta Information

TypeJournal Article
MethodologyStatistical Modeling
ObjectiveLegitimacy, Participation
RegionEurope
SectorPublic Safety

Sponsored by

This work by The GovLab is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.