Abstract
Using a case study approach, this article examines how organizational trauma emerges and manifests within UK police services. A scoping review methodology is used to identify 21 high-profile policing cases that fall within a taxonomy of organizational trauma (Isik, 2017). Cases were classified across three typologies: events resulting from internal organizational processes, trauma-prone occupations, and catastrophic events. Using thematic analysis to examine documents from government inquiries and independent investigations reveals several findings. Police organizational trauma in the cases examined is often internally controllable, caused through endemic failures in professional standards and unpreparedness, compounded by reactive leadership and insufficient employee support. Collective impacts on employees’ manifests in over corrective bureaucracy, operational paralysis, and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and burnout. External consequences include diminished public confidence, trust, and legitimacy. To mitigate, recommendations include reframing collective trauma as an institutional risk, adopting trauma-informed interventions, and investing in leadership development and ethical vigilance.
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