Policing has developed as an increasingly important and popular subject of study at colleges and universities in western societies, either as a subject in its own right or as part of broader courses in the field of criminology and criminal justice. This book aims to bring together the key readings which constitute the core of policing studies, setting them within the necessary theoretical, social and political context, and providing an explanatory commentary.
The book is divided into five major • the history of focusing on the emergence of the police in the USA and the UK, but including several readings on other policing systems;
• the role of the in particular the balance of tension between crime fighting, order maintenance and other forms of service, and how these arguments have developed historically;
• organisation and how these are theorised and understood, considering arguments about the need for reform;
• approaches to from crackdowns and the ‘broken windows’ theory, through zero tolerance to community policing;
• policing debates about the future shape of policing, including work on risk, actuarialism and post-Keynesianism, and the debate on how current trends are to be understood.
William Henry Timothy Newburn is an academic, specialising in criminology and policing. He was president of the British Society of Criminology from 2005-2008, director of the Mannheim Centre for Criminology from 2003-2008 and is currently head of the Department of Social Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science.