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E-raamat: Crime, Regulation and Control During the Blitz: Protecting the Population of Bombed Cities

(Royal Holloway University of London, UK), (University of Liverpool, UK), (Keele University, UK)
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Crime, Regulation and Control during the Blitz looks at the social effect of bombing on urban centres like Liverpool, Coventry and London, critically examining how the wartime authorities struggled to regulate and control crime and offending during the Blitz. Focusing predominantly on Liverpool, it investigates how the authorities and citizens anticipated the aerial war, and how the State and local authorities proposed to contain and protect a population made unruly, potentially deviant and drawn into a new landscape of criminal regulation.

Drawing on a range of contemporary sources, the book throws into relief today's experiences of war and terror, the response in crime and deviancy, and the experience and practices of preparedness in anticipation of terrible threats. The authors reveal how everyday activities became criminalised through wartime regulations and explore how other forms of crime such as looting, theft and drunkenness took on a new and frightening aspect. Crime, Regulation and Control during the Blitz offers a critical contribution to how we understand crime, security, and regulation in both the past and the present.

Arvustused

Second to London, Liverpool and the wider Merseyside area was the most continuously bombed city in Britain during the Blitz, largely because it was a major port. In the ten months of air raids, some 4,000 people died, and the area suffered enormous loss of property. This is not a military history and is not concerned with theoretical arguments or even many literary accountsit is truly administrative history on the ground. The authors describe how the city regulated itself to cope with the bombing. This meant burdensome restrictions on virtually all aspects of civic life, including prewar planning, enforcement of blackout regulations, rescue work, damage control, civilian evacuation, and the need to rehouse people and keep schools open. The blackout provided ample opportunity for theft from dock areas and looting of damaged property. Stolen goods often made their way to a thriving black market. In spite of some false news reports, there were no gas attacks and no widespread panic, and although many people despaired, the city managed to carry on. A fascinating, scholarly, well-documented book that will expand the history of that grim time. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All academic levels/libraries. * CHOICE * Refreshingly, the text is not London-centric ... A rich and detailed account of Liverpool during the Blitz, both from a crime history perspective, and as a work of wider social history/ historical human geography. * Law, Crime & History * There has been little detailed research on wartime policing ... so this is a welcome contribution. * Police History Society Newsletter *

Muu info

An interdisciplinary study on crime and security in blitzed British cities.
List of Illustrations
viii
Acknowledgements x
List of Abbreviations
xi
1 Introduction
1(26)
Peripatetic perspectives
4(9)
Protecting the population: approaching morale, criminality and mobilities
13(4)
(Western) Approaches to the Liverpool Blitz
17(4)
Methodology
21(1)
The structure of the book
22(5)
2 Anticipating the Blitz
27(28)
Liverpool as target
27(4)
Strikes
31(2)
Interdependencies
33(5)
Going underground
38(2)
Adapting a new machinery
40(2)
Problems, plans and performance
42(2)
Evacuation
44(4)
Near futures
48(3)
Theatricality and performance
51(2)
Conclusion
53(2)
3 Nervous System
55(24)
Nerve centre
57(6)
Scale and abstraction
63(2)
Contingencies
65(4)
A moral geography
69(9)
Conclusion
78(1)
4 Crime During Wartime
79(24)
Wartime crime on Merseyside
81(8)
Policing the Defence of the Realm
89(2)
Looting, blackout and automobility
91(8)
Conclusion
99(4)
5 Grey and Black Markets
103(20)
How the legal market operated
104(3)
How illegal markets operate
107(7)
Cracking down on the docks
114(4)
The everyday grey and black markets on Merseyside
118(3)
Conclusion
121(2)
6 Liverpool's Cure for Wartime Juvenile Delinquency
123(20)
Was there a rising tide of delinquency?
124(5)
Bombsites and shelters: juvenile crime on Merseyside
129(4)
The cure for juvenile delinquency?
133(3)
The Liverpool experiment in youth reform
136(5)
Conclusion
141(2)
7 Controlling Mobility in the City
143(26)
Traffic
144(3)
Evacuation, billeting and trekking
147(4)
Political creatures
151(4)
The missing
155(1)
Rescue
156(7)
Damage and displacement
163(2)
Conclusion
165(4)
8 Monitoring, Measuring and Maintaining Morale
169(20)
The problem of morale
170(1)
Targeting
171(2)
Morale and productivity
173(4)
Mass atmospherics
177(2)
A moral(e) geography
179(5)
Morale and mobility
184(3)
Conclusion
187(2)
9 The Legacy of the Blitz
189(13)
The immediate legacy
189(3)
Liverpool could take it
192(2)
Post-war reconstruction --- physical and mental
194(1)
Looking to the future --- a `new Jerusalem'?
195(3)
Post-war consensus on criminal justice?
198(1)
The modern Merseyside Blitz and the making of a myth
199(3)
Notes 202(22)
Bibliography 224(8)
Index 232
Peter Adey is Professor of Human Geography at Royal Holloway University of London, UK.

David J. Cox is Reader in Criminal Justice History at the University of Wolverhampton, UK.

Barry Godfrey is Professor of Sociology, Social Policy and Criminology at the University of Liverpool, UK.