Book Chapter

Who Reports Crime? Citizen Engagement with the Police in Russia and Georgia

Year:

2022

Published in:

Routledge
citizen engagement
crime reporting
police
survey experiments
government influence

What factors affect citizens’ engagement with the state? We explore this question through a study of victims’ and bystanders’ willingness to report crimes to the police, using data from survey experiments conducted in Russia and Georgia. We find that citizens’ willingness to report in both countries is strongly influenced by the nature of the crime, but not generally by instruments that the state might use to encourage greater reporting. Our results recommend scepticism about the ability of governments to easily engineer citizens’ engagement with the state.

Other publications by

50 publications found

2015
Journal article

Does Reform Prevent Rebellion? Evidence From Russia’s Emancipation of the Serfs

Publisher: Comparative Political Studies

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Evgeny Finkel, Tricia D. Olsen

2023
Journal article

Damaged Collateral And Firm‑Level Finance: Evidence From Russia’s War In Ukraine

Publisher: Journal of Comparative Economics

Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Scott Gehlbach, Mariia Panga

2021
Working paper

The Oligarch Vanishes: Defensive Ownership, Property Rights, And Political Connections

Publisher: SSRN

Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Anton Shirikov, Scott Gehlbach

2019
Working paper

Obfuscating Ownership

Publisher: The National Science Foundation

Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Scott Gehlbach, Anton Shirikov

2014
Journal article

Government Control Of The Media

Publisher: Journal of Public Economics

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Konstantin Sonin