1st Edition

Policing: A short history

By Philip Rawlings Copyright 2002
    280 Pages
    by Willan

    280 Pages
    by Willan

    This book provides an overview of the history of policing in the UK. Its primary aim is to investigate the shifting nature of policing over time, and to provide a historical foundation to today's debates. Policing: a short history moves away from a focus on the origins of the 'new police', and concentrates rather on broader (but much neglected) patterns of policing. How was there a shift from communal responsibility to policing? What has been expected of the police by the public and vice versa? How have the police come to dominate modern thinking on policing? The book shows how policing - in the sense of crime control and order maintenance - has come to be seen as the work which the police do, even though the bulk of policing is undertaken by people and organisations other than the police. This book will be essential reading for anybody interested in the history of policing, on how differing perceptions emerged on the function of policing on the part of the public, the state and the police, and in today's intense debates on what the police do.

    1. Introduction  2. From the blood feud to the justice of the peace 600 - 1400  3. Policing the poor and the bureaucratisation of policing: 1400 - 1660  4. The professionalization of policing: 1660 - 1800  5. The Jenny Darbies: the new Police  6. 'In the midst of starving hordes': 1850 - 1939  7. 'The Foundation of Law and Order' 1939 - 2000

    Biography

    Philip Rawlings is Professor of the Law of Finance, and Deputy Director of the Centre for Commercial Law at University College London.