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50 Facts Everyone Should Know About the Police [Mīkstie vāki]

Edited by (Birmingham City University), Edited by (Staffordshire University), Edited by (Staffordshire University), Edited by (Birmingham City University), Edited by (Birmingham City University, UK)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 382 pages, height x width: 203x127 mm, Not illustrated
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Mar-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Policy Press
  • ISBN-10: 1447370473
  • ISBN-13: 9781447370475
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  • Cena: 24,80 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 382 pages, height x width: 203x127 mm, Not illustrated
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Mar-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Policy Press
  • ISBN-10: 1447370473
  • ISBN-13: 9781447370475
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Have you ever wondered whether crime dramas reflect the reality of police work? Or what the future of policing could look like in the context of recent controversies?



Offering thought-provoking insights into understanding, addressing and preventing crime, this fascinating 'go to' book reveals the myths and realities of policing in the 21st century. The 50 facts take in crime prevention, the investigative process, forensics, models of policing, the limits of police powers and a range of other provocative themes. Offering a deeper and richer understanding of the profession, this book will equip you to think critically about modern perceptions of policing.

Recenzijas

"A fascinating, readable and easily accessible introduction to some of the key contemporary issues and controversies in policing, crime control and criminal investigation." Peter Squires, University of Brighton A splendid concept, well executed. This delightful read has bite-size snippets with insightful glimpses into many aspects of policing not covered in a standard curriculum. Jerry Ratcliffe, Temple University "Thought-provoking and engaging, this collection provides a concise point of reference for anyone seeking to question commonplace assumptions about the nature of policing in contemporary society. Highly addictive!" Michael Rowe, Northumbria University

Introduction - John Bahadur Lamb, Max Hart, James Treadwell, Adam Lynes
and Craig Kelly


1. There is no definitive proof that Robert Peel ever developed the
principles that underpin British policing - John Bahadur Lamb


2. 'Trust is the foundation upon which consent and legitimacy for policing is
built' - Mark Manning and Nigel South


3. The police have acted as 'moral guardians' since the early 19th century -
Peter Joyce and Wendy Laverick


4. The senior investigating officer role is not like you see on TV! - Stephen
Tonks


5. The role of the custody sergeant is to be the guardian of an individuals
rights and wellbeing - Martin Steventon


6. Crimes are classed as solved once someone is charged with an offence -
Nick Mills


7. The Integrated Offender Management scheme has aided significant reductions
in reoffending since its formulation in 2009 - Sacha Smith


8. Roads policing is key to saving lives, disrupting crime, and police
legitimacy, but it has been routinely undervalued and is sometimes resisted -
Helen Wells


9. The police investigate some crimes that occur inside prisons! - James
Treadwell


10. The number of volunteer 'special' constables has reduced from 67,000 in
the 1950s to under 10,000 in the last decade - Colin Rogers


11. Policing has now been professionalised - Jacob Thandi and Nick Gibbs


12. Until 2020, police officers did not require formal education
qualifications - Mark Lakey


13. The senior rank structures of the Metropolitan and City of London Police
differ from every other force in England and Wales - Ron Winch


14. The chief constable is operationally independent and cannot act on
unlawful orders or unduly intrusive political direction - Wendy Laverick and
Peter Joyce


15. Policewomen had a separate department from that of their male colleagues
until the 1970s - Charlotte Rigby and Em Temple-Malt


16. In the six months leading to March 2022, more than 1,500 police staff in
England and Wales were accused of violence against women and girls - Laura
Riley


17. A 2022 investigation highlighted 11,277 instances of internal misogyny
and sexual misconduct in the police - Sarah Jones


18. Between 2011 and 2020 there were 173 suicides in the UK police force -
Lauren Jane Gillespie


19. Over 100 police officers are assaulted every day - Michelle Clarke


20. The Independent Office for Police Conduct is independent and makes its
decisions entirely independently of the police and government - Victoria Bell
and Sarah Plimley


21. Police rank structures have remained relatively unchanged - Dom McVeigh


22. Helicopters assume a crucial role in contemporary policing - Adam Lynes


23. The Ministry of Defence Police has the highest number of Authorised
Firearms Officers, secondly only to the Metropolitan Police Service - Steve
Wadley


24. Violence is an essential tool in the vocation of policing - David
Sausdal


25. Despite popular belief, a substantial proportion of the British Police is
armed in England and Wales - Craig Kelly


26. Between 1987 and 2023, only one officer has been convicted for
manslaughter following a death in which police used force in England and
Wales - Abi Dymond and Brian Rappert


27. There is no automatic right to access body-worn video footage in England
and Wales, even if the footage is about you - Sharda Murria


28. When the police refer to evidence, this doesnt just mean DNA and
fingerprints - Laura Hammond


29. Criminal profiling of serial murderers has never worked - Craig Jackson


30. The perception of the police as being institutionally homophobic has
hampered the ability to protect members of the gay community in England and
Wales - Ben Colliver


31. The police uniform serves an important symbolic purpose - Camilla De
Camargo


32. The majority of police investigations by uniformed officers focus upon
volume crime - Max Hart


33. In 2023, just 5.7 per cent of reported crimes led to a charge or summons
- Keir Irwin-Rogers


34. In England and Wales, no suspect is Identified in 74.2% of residential
burglary cases - Jack Greig Midlane, Briann Clifford and Mark Stokes


35. Only 1 per cent of fraud in England and Wales results in a criminal
justice outcome - Max Hart


36. The state is overwhelmingly reliant on the private sector to effectively
police art crime - Tereza Ųstbų Kuldova


37. UK policing structures create an open goal for organised criminals in
rural areas - Kate Tudor


38. The UK Serious Organised Crime Strategy (2018) aims to 'equip the whole
of government, the private sector, communities and individual citizens to
align their efforts in a single collective endeavour to rid our society of
the harms of serious and organised crime' - Paul Andell and Kelly Gray


39. The current approach to policing drugs is hypocritical, harmful and
ineffective - Tammy Ayres


40. The police often overestimate the value of the drugs they seize - Craig
Ancrum and James Treadwell


41. Much of the polices current approaches to knife crime are wholly
ineffective - Natasha Pope


42. In the pursuit of solving crimes against children, children are too often
harmed - Sean Monaghan


43. Police in England and Wales were responsible for 55 fatal police
shootings in the last 24 years, much lower than US counterparts - Nicholas
Walrath


44. Worldwide, the increasing use of militarised policing has been employed
against protestors - Kyla Bavin


45. Proscription under the Terrorism Act 2000 allows for arrest and
prosecution, with 93 organisations listed to date - Leon Skerritt


46. The police have often attempted to pre-empt cases of political and
religious violence through covert intelligence - Dylan Sears


47. Police in England and Wales have, for many decades, intervened more in
street sex work than indoor sex work - Ian R. Cook


48. In 2021, only 1.6 per cent of rapes reported to police were prosecuted -
Emma Williams


49. Contrary to popular belief, at the end of registered sexual offenders'
prison and community sentences they are managed solely by specialist police
officers - Sarah Pemberton and Stephanie Kewley


50. Rape is routinely used as a tool of war, however even in peacetime
Military Service Police inadequately report and investigate sexual offences
committed by army personnel - Sarah Kingston
John Bahadur Lamb is Senior Lecturer in the Institute of Policing at Staffordshire University.









Max Hart is Lecturer in Criminology at Birmingham City University.









James Treadwell is Professor in Criminology at Staffordshire University.









Adam Lynes is Associate Professor in Criminology at Birmingham City University.









Craig Kelly is Senior Lecturer in Criminology at Birmingham City University.