3.05 Leadership to create public value

Academic team: Prof Jean Hartley, Quoc Vo, Jim Beashel, Dr Steven Parker, Dr Loua Kahlil, Dr Mariafrancesca Sicilia
Policing partners: Gwent Police, British Transport Police, Cambridgeshire Constabulary
Status: Complete

The National Police Chiefs Council Chair, Sara Thornton, has suggested that “Public value theory prompts us to think about the value we are trying to create. What outcomes are we delivering for the citizen?.....So what are the police for? What is the value we are trying to create in policing?”.

It is important that measures of added value go beyond the counting of activities, or even the counting of outputs (e.g. stop and search, number of arrests or convictions) to include ways in which public organisations contributed to the wider aims of society. For example, creating a fair, just or peaceful society or enabling citizens to live confident, safe and fulfilling lives.

Police leaders have to navigate how to achieve valuable outcomes for society, and this research project explores this through the lens of public value. The research commenced with a literature review examining the relevance of public value to policing. The field work involved case studies, which also use observation and other data collection from the police and the public. Three questions were explored:

  • How do police leaders perceive and conceptualise public value (perhaps in different language) in complex and contested situations?
  • Does political astuteness help leaders to create public value?
  • How far do police and public have similar or different views about public value and how is that handled by leaders? 

Outputs

TitleOutput typeLead academicYear
Leadership for public value: Political astuteness as a conceptual linkBook chapterHartley, J2019
Leading and recognizing public valueJournal articleHartley, J2019
Ten propositions about public leadershipJournal articleHartley, J2018
Towards an empirical research agenda for public value theoryJournal articleHartley, J2017
Leadership to create public value: a case study of a multi-agency victims hubPaperBeashel, J2017
Leadership to create public value and Q-methodologyVideoVo, Q2017
Leadership with political astutenessConference paperHartley, J2017
Public value at the cross-roads: a systematic literature reviewLiterature reviewHartley, J2017
On course? The leadership of a rural crime initiativeConference paperParker, S2017
Leadership to create public value: a case study of an initiative to address rural crimePaperParker, S2017
Leadership to create public value in complex and contested situationsConference paperParker, S2017
Using Q to asess public valueConference paperVo, Q2017
Understanding public value through policing priorities using Q methodologyFinal reportVo, Q2017
Understanding public value through policing priorities using Q methodologyExecutive summaryVo, Q2017
Towards a multi-actor theory of public value co-creationJournal articleBryson, J2016
Public value: a new approach to demand in policingThought paperHartley, J2015
Public value: a new means to peel an apple?Conference paperHartley, J2015

News

Findings from an evaluation of the pilot application of AI for witness statement and report generation

Dr Paul Walley and Dr Helen Glasspoole-Bird have published an evaluation report entitled “An Evaluation of the Pilot Application of Artificial Intelligence to Witness Statement and Report Generation at Hertfordshire Constabulary”.  The work studies the outputs of version 1 of an AI application that takes audio from Rapid Video Response interviews with victims of domestic abuse and converts this into relevant summary documents including MG11 witness statements.

15th May 2025