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This article examines a key explanation for the growth of private policing in North America and Western Europe - the influential mass private property thesis (Shearing and Stenning 1981). The discussion of private policing in Western Europe still tends to be heavily influenced by theories developed in the North American context, theories which may be problematic in the contrasting legal, social and economic contexts of Western European nations. The development of more Eurocentric theories has to date been inhibited by the relative paucity of empirical data on the rise of private policing in European countries. Recent research in Britain (Jones and Newburn 1998b) has begun to address this problem, and to map out some important contrasts with the North American experience. By considering these contrasts, it is possible to identify some key areas for future research on private policing in European countries and thus provide a more contextually-grounded series of explanations for what is happening to policing.Joseph Rowntree Foundation Professor of Urban Social Policy 相似文献
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This article examines the contribution of scholarly work on ‘policy transfer’ and related concepts to our knowledge of how far, and in what ways, particular policy ‘models’ of security and justice travel across national boundaries, and what might explain this phenomenon. The article begins by summarizing the key findings of extant empirical studies of cross‐national policy movement in the fields of crime, security, and justice. It then considers the normative dimension to debates about policy transfer, observing that much of the literature adopts a pessimistic position about the problematic nature of international policy movement in security and justice, and discusses some of the reasons for such pessimism. The article then reflects on ways in which normative principles could be applied to considerations of prospective policy transfer, and the implications for the broader possibilities for ‘progressive’ policy transfer in relation to crime, security, and justice. 相似文献
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Independent appointed members to police authorities were introduced as part of the reforms brought about by the Police and
Magistrates' Courts Act 1994. This radical change to the make-up of police authorities was defended by government ministers
as a necessary reform in order to broaden the expertise and experience available in such bodies. Critics, by contrast, saw
the change as a move to further centralise control, and as a means of reducing local democratic input, over policing. Using
data from a national telephone survey of police authority clerks, and case studies of three police force areas, this article
examines the role of `independent' appointed members to local police authorities. We argue that the early signs are that the
new members are becoming well integrated into police authorities, although such bodies have been significantly depoliticised
as a result of this and other changes.
This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. 相似文献
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