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Policing: Key Readings [Hardback]

Edited by (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 848 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 1730 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2004
  • Izdevniecība: Willan Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1843920921
  • ISBN-13: 9781843920922
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 848 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 1730 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2004
  • Izdevniecība: Willan Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1843920921
  • ISBN-13: 9781843920922
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

Policing has developed as an increasingly important and popular subject of study at colleges and universities in western societies, either as a subject in its own right or as part of broader courses in the field of criminology and criminal justice. This book aims to bring together the key readings which constitute the core of policing studies, setting them within the necessary theoretical, social and political context, and providing an explanatory commentary.

The book is divided into five major sections:

• the history of policing: focusing on the emergence of the police in the USA and the UK, but including several readings on other policing systems;

• the role of the police: in particular the balance of tension between crime fighting, order maintenance and other forms of service, and how these arguments have developed historically;

• organisation and culture: how these are theorised and understood, considering arguments about the need for reform;

• approaches to policing: from crackdowns and the ‘broken windows’ theory, through zero tolerance to community policing;

• policing futures: debates about the future shape of policing, including work on risk, actuarialism and post-Keynesianism, and the debate on how current trends are to be understood.

Recenzijas

'This volume offers a definitive and invaluable resource for students (and scholars) who wish to learn about the development and content of policing research. It is a fitting companion to Tim Newburn's 2003 Handbook of Policing, which provided a state-of-the-art collection of contemporary papers on the main aspects of contemporary policing in the UK. Tim Newburn's editorial introductions to each section of both volumes are exceptionally judicious and helpful, drawing out the core points of each contribution and its relationship to the others. Policing: Key Readings offers not only a wealth of material for students new to the field, but an opportunity to assess the development and future(s) of policing research. For me, studying the papers selected from a range of nearly a half-century repeatedly gave me a frisson of shocked pleasure at rediscovering the quality of the classics of the field, which I have referred to but not properly re-read for many years. - Professor Robert Reiner (LSE), in Policing and Society (2006)

Introduction ix
List of abbreviations
xi
Acknowledgements xii
Part A: The Emergence and Development of the Police
1(128)
Introduction
The demand for order in civil society
7(18)
Allan Silver
Police and people: the birth of Mr Peel's `blue locusts'
25(5)
Michael Ignatieff
Cops and Bobbies, 1830--1870
30(18)
Wilbur R. Miller
A `new police' in Australia
48(21)
Mark Finnane
The emergence of the police -- the colonial dimension
69(11)
Mike Brogden
The emergence of the police -- explaining police reform in eighteenth and nineteenth century England
80(8)
John Styles
The evolving strategy of policing
88(21)
George L. Kelling
Mark H. Moore
The evolving strategy of police: a minority view
109(20)
Hubert Williams
Patrick V. Murphy
Part B: The Role and Function of the Police
129(132)
Introduction
The police as peace officers
132(5)
Michael Banton
Responsibilities of the police
137(4)
William Westley
What do the police do?
141(9)
David H. Bayley
Florence Nightingale in pursuit of Willie Sutton: a theory of the police
150(23)
Egon Bittner
The paradox of dispossession: skid row at night
173(18)
William Ker Muir Jr
The police: mandate, strategies, and appearances
191(24)
Peter K. Manning
The police as reproducers of order
215(32)
Richard V. Ericson
The investigative function
247(14)
P. Greenwood
J.M. Chaiken
J. Petersilia
Part C: Police Culture
261(126)
Introduction
A sketch of the policeman's `working personality'
264(16)
Jerome Skolnick
The asshole
280(17)
John Van Maanen
Street cops and management cops: the two cultures of policing
297(18)
Elizabeth Reuss-Ianni
Francis A.J. Ianni
Culture as figurative action
315(23)
Clifford Shearing
Richard Ericson
Changing police culture
338(26)
Janet Chan
Police (canteen) sub-culture: an appreciation
364(23)
P.A.J. Waddington
Part D: Policing Strategies
387(178)
Introduction
Improving policing: a problem-oriented approach
392(20)
Herman Goldstein
Who ya gonna call? The police as problem-busters
412(16)
John E. Eck
William Spelman
Community policing in Chicago
428(14)
Wes Skogan
Susan Hartnett
The rhetoric of community policing
442(18)
Carl B. Klockars
Broken windows: the police and neighborhood safety
460(12)
James Q. Wilson
George L. Kelling
Crime is down in New York City: blame the police
472(11)
William J. Bratton
Beyond zero tolerance
483(25)
David Dixon
Reforming to preserve: Compstat and strategic problem solving in American policing
508(22)
David Weisburd
Stephen D. Mastrofski
Ann Marie McNally
Rosann Greenspan
James Willis
Sizing up COMPSTAT: an important administrative innovation in policing
530(20)
Mark H. Moore
The policing of risk
550(15)
Richard V. Ericson
Kevin D. Haggerty
Part E: Deviance, Ethics and Control
565(106)
Introduction
The beating of Rodney King
568(13)
Jerome Skolnick
James Fyfe
The Dirty Harry problem
581(15)
Carl B. Klockars
Gratuities and corruption
596(28)
John Kleinig
Police accountability revisited
624(12)
Geoffrey Marshall
The legal regulation of policing
636(35)
David Dixon
Part F: The Emerging Pattern of Policing
671(142)
Introduction
Policing a postmodern society
675(23)
Robert Reiner
Policing, politics and postmodernity
698(17)
Pat O'Malley
The future of policing
715(18)
David H. Bayley
Clifford D. Shearing
The transformation of policing? Understanding current trends in policing systems
733(18)
Trevor Jones
Tim Newburn
Women in control?
751(10)
Frances Heidensohn
The new surveillance
761(25)
Gary T. Marx
The thick green line: the growing involvement of military forces in domestic law enforcement
786(11)
Colonel Charles J. Dunlap Jr
Cops and spooks: the uneasy partnership
797(16)
Jean-Paul Brodeur
Index 813


Tim Newburn

is Professor of Criminology and Director of the Mannheim Centre, London School of Economics, former President of the British Society of Criminology and an experienced and prolific author.