Fire Alarms for Police Patrols: Experimental Evidence on Coproduction of Public Safety

Effective public goods provision requires coproduction by both citizens and the government. Search costs that complicate citizens’ ability to share information constitute a critical and understudied impediment to this coproduction. We experimentally evaluate search costs in a rural, conflict-affected province of the Philippines. We randomize the rollout of a police hotline that dramatically reduces the costs of reporting and compare it against both the status quo and an alternative intervention that builds trust but does not affect search costs. The hotline increased the likelihood of reporting crimes by 10–19 percentage points. The intervention reduced perceived insurgent activity but had no perceptible impact on ordinary crime. Our findings suggest that addressing search costs substantially improves service delivery, potentially explaining why policies imported from higher-capacity countries may fail to achieve results in developing contexts.

[1]  Erica De Bruin Policing for Peace: Institutions, Expectations, and Security in Divided Societies. By Matthew Nanes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021. 200p. $110.00 cloth, $34.99 paper. , 2022, Perspectives on Politics.

[2]  Jacob N. Shapiro,et al.  Community policing does not build citizen trust in police or reduce crime in the Global South , 2021, Science.

[3]  Dotan Haim,et al.  Family Matters: The Double-Edged Sword of Police-Community Connections , 2021, The Journal of Politics.

[4]  Muhammad Yasir Khan,et al.  Data and Policy Decisions: Experimental Evidence from Pakistan , 2020, Journal of Development Economics.

[5]  Benjamin Lessing Conceptualizing Criminal Governance , 2020, Perspectives on Politics.

[6]  Dotan Haim,et al.  Self-Administered Field Surveys on Sensitive Topics , 2020, Journal of Experimental Political Science.

[7]  N. Zhang,et al.  Literacy and State–Society Interactions in Nineteenth‐Century France , 2020 .

[8]  Austin L. Wright,et al.  Information Operations Increase Civilian Security Cooperation , 2019, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[9]  Benjamin S. Morse,et al.  Establishing the Rule of Law in Weak and War-torn States: Evidence from a Field Experiment with the Liberian National Police , 2018, American Political Science Review.

[10]  Kendra L. Koivu,et al.  Cases of Convenience? The Divergence of Theory from Practice in Case Selection in Qualitative and Mixed-Methods Research , 2017, PS: Political Science & Politics.

[11]  N. Zhang,et al.  Legibility and the Informational Foundations of State Capacity , 2017, The Journal of Politics.

[12]  Renard Sexton Aid as a Tool against Insurgency: Evidence from Contested and Controlled Territory in Afghanistan , 2016, American Political Science Review.

[13]  S. Kalyvas How Civil Wars Help Explain Organized Crime—and How They Do Not , 2015 .

[14]  Nils B. Weidmann,et al.  Is the Phone Mightier Than the Sword? Cellphones and Insurgent Violence in Iraq , 2015, International Organization.

[15]  Jenny C. Aker,et al.  Is Information Power? Using Mobile Phones and Free Newspapers during an Election in Mozambique , 2013, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[16]  Stephen P. Ryan,et al.  Incentives Work: Getting Teachers to Come to School , 2012 .

[17]  Esther Duflo,et al.  Can Institutions Be Reformed from within? Evidence from a Randomized Experiment with the Rajasthan Police , 2012 .

[18]  D. Stasavage When Distance Mattered: Geographic Scale and the Development of European Representative Assemblies , 2010, American Political Science Review.

[19]  E. Arias The Dynamics of Criminal Governance: Networks and Social Order in Rio de Janeiro , 2006, Journal of Latin American Studies.

[20]  Tom R. Tyler,et al.  The Role of Procedural Justice and Legitimacy in Shaping Public Support for Policing , 2003 .

[21]  Tom R. Tyler,et al.  Procedural Justice, Legitimacy, and the Effective Rule of Law , 2003, Crime and Justice.

[22]  Richard O. Mason,et al.  Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed , 2000, Inf. Soc..

[23]  D. Dennis,et al.  Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed , 1998 .

[24]  Susan M. Hartnett,et al.  Community Policing, Chicago Style , 1997 .

[25]  E. Ostrom Crossing the great divide: Coproduction, synergy, and development , 1996 .

[26]  D. Weisburd,et al.  Policing drug hot spots: The Jersey City drug market analysis experiment , 1995 .

[27]  Roger G. Noll,et al.  Administrative Procedures as Instruments of Political Control , 1987 .

[28]  Gabrielle Kruks-Wisner Great Expectations, Great Grievances: The Politics of Citizens’ Complaints in India , 2021 .

[29]  D. Bayley Post-conflict Police Reform: Is Northern Ireland a Model? , 2008 .

[30]  S. Kalyvas,et al.  The logic of violence in civil war , 2011 .

[31]  J. Jacobson Policing drug hot-spots , 1999 .