Publication | Closed Access
A political economy of community policing
38
Citations
35
References
1999
Year
Criminal CodeCommunity PolicingCriminal Justice ReformSystemic JusticeCrime AnalysisLawCriminal LawPolice PsychologySocial SciencesIndustrial PolicePolitical EconomyPublic PolicyModern PoliceCriminal JusticeInternational CriminologySociologyLegal HistoryPlaces Recent TrendsJusticePolitical ScienceSocial Justice
Places recent trends in policing in the USA into historical context, emphasizing the critical importance of political, economic, and social forces on the formation and development of police institutions and practices. Specifically, this paper describes four major developments in policing in relation to the US political economy: pre‐industrial police, industrial police, modern police, and postmodern police. Each of these developments has unique characteristics. At the same time, each retains certain structural imperatives which transcend the particulars and ultimately tend to preserve the police as front line defenders of the status quo. It is through an analysis of historically specific characteristics of, and fundamental structural conditions for policing that this paper contributes to a better understanding of the potential of contemporary police agencies to play a role in achieving either greater social justice or just greater social control.
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