This is the fifth and final volume in the Official History of Criminal Justice in England and Wales.
This volume covers the uneven and often irresolute evolution of policing from the late 1940s to the end of the 1990s, concentrating on the impact of a succession of scandals on the reputation and regulation of the police; and the fluctuating relations between central government, local authorities and police forces in shaping the control of police funding, policy and organisation, particularly in response to a growth in the scale and intensity of social protest, and, above all, on the shifting sands of the policing of public order illustrated in the prolonged miners’ strike and urban unrest of the 1980s. It is a complement to earlier volumes in the series that focused on the liberalisation of the laws on capital punishment, abortion and homosexual relations between adult men in the 1960s; the founding of the Crown Court in 1971 and the Crown Prosecution Service in 1985; transformations in penal policy, and the politics of law and order.
It will be of much interest to scholars of British political history, criminology and sociology.
This is the fifth and final volume in the Official History of Criminal Justice in England and Wales. It covers the uneven and often irresolute evolution of policing from the late 1940s to the end of the 1990s.
Introduction Part I: The Police in an Age of Optimism
1. Misconduct,
Scandal and Growing Scrutiny
2. The Royal Commission
3. Towards the Police
Act Part II: Controlling the Constable
4. Conduct and Complaints
5. The
Police and Criminal Evidence Act
6. Malpractice and another Royal Commission
Part III: As Optimism Fades: Changes in organisation and practice
7. Early
Organisational Change
8. The Rise and Fall of Unit Beat Policing
9. Community
Policing
10. Crime Prevention Part IV: Changing Police Culture?
11. Race,
Racism and Policing
12. Women and Policing Part V: Maintaining Order
13. The
Tide Turns
14. Urban Unrest
15. Enter Lord Scarman
16. The Miners Strike
17.
Rioting Returns
18. Policing Under the Spotlight Part VI: Finance, Function
and the Future of Policing
19. A Changing Political Context
20. Police
Finance and Efficiency
21. The Rise of Managerialism and Consumerism
22.
Reform Attempts Gather Pace
23. The Limits of Fundamental Reform Conclusion
Bibliography
Tim Newburn is Professor of Criminology and Social Policy at the London School of Economics, UK, and a former President of the British Society of Criminology. He is author of over 40 books, including The Official History of Criminal Justice in England and Wales, Volume IV: The Politics of Law and Order (Routledge, 2022) with David Downes.