The psychology of criminal authority: introducing the legitimacy of secret power scale
The psychology of criminal authority: introducing the legitimacy of secret power scale
The state’s monopoly on sovereignty can be challenged by criminal systems capable of gaining legitimacy within communities. Understanding the psychological basis of such legitimacy requires broadening traditional conceptualizations of authority to consider how it operates without legal backing and outside formal channels. This research introduces the Legitimacy ofSecret Power (L-SP) scale, a tool measuring individuals’ appraisal of illegal groups’ power. We validated L-SP through three studies (Ntotal = 3,173). Findings demonstrate a reliable, 20-itemmono-factorial structure. Study 3 tested L-SP’s measurement in variance in the UK, Italy, Japan,and the US. Across studies, L-SP correlated with support for illegality, ideologies of masculine honor, and social dominance. It was inversely related to the perceived national threat of criminal groups, democratic attitudes, and police legitimacy. Notably, L-SP predicted individuals’willingness to report criminal groups independent of fear or perceptions of police legitimacy. Theoretical implications and future directions are discussed.
secret power, organized crime, authority, governance, legitimacy
Travaglino, Giovanni A.
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Mirisola, Alberto
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Moon, Chanki
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Burgmer, Pascal
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Imada, Hirotaka
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Giammusso, Isabella
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D'Ottone, Silvana
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Nawata, Kengo
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Ozeki, Miki
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Abrams, Dominic
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Travaglino, Giovanni A.
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Mirisola, Alberto
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Moon, Chanki
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Burgmer, Pascal
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Imada, Hirotaka
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Giammusso, Isabella
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D'Ottone, Silvana
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Nawata, Kengo
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Ozeki, Miki
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Abrams, Dominic
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Travaglino, Giovanni A., Mirisola, Alberto, Moon, Chanki, Burgmer, Pascal, Imada, Hirotaka, Giammusso, Isabella, D'Ottone, Silvana, Nawata, Kengo, Ozeki, Miki and Abrams, Dominic
(2024)
The psychology of criminal authority: introducing the legitimacy of secret power scale.
Group Processes and Intergroup Relations.
(In Press)
Abstract
The state’s monopoly on sovereignty can be challenged by criminal systems capable of gaining legitimacy within communities. Understanding the psychological basis of such legitimacy requires broadening traditional conceptualizations of authority to consider how it operates without legal backing and outside formal channels. This research introduces the Legitimacy ofSecret Power (L-SP) scale, a tool measuring individuals’ appraisal of illegal groups’ power. We validated L-SP through three studies (Ntotal = 3,173). Findings demonstrate a reliable, 20-itemmono-factorial structure. Study 3 tested L-SP’s measurement in variance in the UK, Italy, Japan,and the US. Across studies, L-SP correlated with support for illegality, ideologies of masculine honor, and social dominance. It was inversely related to the perceived national threat of criminal groups, democratic attitudes, and police legitimacy. Notably, L-SP predicted individuals’willingness to report criminal groups independent of fear or perceptions of police legitimacy. Theoretical implications and future directions are discussed.
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Accepted/In Press date: 17 September 2024
Keywords:
secret power, organized crime, authority, governance, legitimacy
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 496044
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496044
ISSN: 1368-4302
PURE UUID: 75aa5100-5993-4475-932a-87e4d04a2188
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Date deposited: 02 Dec 2024 17:36
Last modified: 02 Dec 2024 17:36
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Contributors
Author:
Giovanni A. Travaglino
Author:
Alberto Mirisola
Author:
Chanki Moon
Author:
Pascal Burgmer
Author:
Hirotaka Imada
Author:
Isabella Giammusso
Author:
Silvana D'Ottone
Author:
Kengo Nawata
Author:
Miki Ozeki
Author:
Dominic Abrams
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