354 Pages
by Routledge

354 Pages
by Routledge

354 Pages
by Routledge

In 1964 Ben Whitaker, who later defeated a former Home Secretary to become Hampstead’s first ever Labour MP and a Junior Minister, wrote The Police to try and reconcile (in his own words) ‘the very different impression police officers make when, as a barrister, one is defending from when one is prosecuting in court’. This book was widely praised as ‘The best and most impartial book that has yet... Read more

1. Eye of the Storm: The Public’s Police  2. The Role of the Police: Force or Service?  3. The Price of Effectiveness  4. Freedom, and Freedom From Crime  5. State and Police: National or Provincial?  6. The Police Officer’s Lot  7. Quis Custodiet: Policing the Police  8. The Cost of Freedom: The Police’s Future.  Appendices:  A. The Judge’s Rules  B. The New System for Complaints  C. Terms of the Trade: Some Police and Criminal Slang.  Bibliography.  Index.

Biography

Ben Whitaker

Reviews of the original edition:

‘Mr Whitaker writes knowledgeably and passionately’ The Times

‘Scepticism soon gave way to admiration’ Police Review

‘A one-man royal commission’ New Society

‘It will be read by policemen and their enemies with almost equal approval, which is no mean achievement’ The London Review of Books