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Zusatztext '... to be welcomed not only by police historians but also by social historians! sociologists! criminologists...Anyone wishing to familiarize themselves with the current state of historical research into twentieth-century policing will do well to start here...This is a valuable collection of essays...' Twentieth Century British History Informationen zum Autor Chris A. Williams is Lecturer in History at The Open University! UK Zusammenfassung Reprints a series of the articles which deal with: the ways that police organisation was structured and reformed; the nature of the policing task in this period; who carried this task out (with particular attention to the arrival of policewomen); and, some of the crises and ongoing areas of concern which they faced. Inhaltsverzeichnis Contents: Introduction; Part I How Police Were Organised: Rotten boroughs: the crisis of urban policing and the decline in municipal independence 1914-64! Chris A. Williams; Some reflections on the report of the Royal Commission on the Police! Jenifer Hart; The independence of Chief Constables! Bryan Keith-Lucas. Part II How Technology Changed Policing: 'Mother! what did policemen do when there weren't any motors?' The law! the police and the regulation of motor traffic in England! 1900-1939! Clive Emsley; Traffic! telephones and police boxes: the deterioration of beat policing in Birmingham! Liverpool and Manchester between the World Wars! Joanne Klein; Policing! planning and the regulation of traffic in post-war Leicester! Shane Ewen; Police surveillance and the emergence of CCTV in the 1960s! Chris A. Williams. Part III What Police Did: The 'ghost squad': undercover policing in London! 1945-49! Mark Roodhouse; Crime does not pay. Thinking again about detectives in the first century of the Metropolitan Police! R.M. Morris; The police and the people: gambling in Salford! 1900-1939! Andrew Davies; Containment: managing street prostitution in London 1918-1959! Stefan Anthony Slater; 'The coffee club menace': policing youth! leisure and sexuality in post-war Manchester! Louise A. Jackson. Part IV Who Police Were: A portrait of a novice constable in the London Metropolitan Police c.1900! Haia Shpayer-Makov; Street! beat and respectability: the culture and self-image of the Victorian and Edwardian urban policeman! Mark Clapson and Clive Emsley; A policewife's lot is not a happy one: police wives in the 1930s and 1940s! Barbara Weinberger; 'Walking the streets in a way no decent woman should': women police in World War I! Philippa Levine; Care or control? The Metropolitan Women Police and child welfare! 1919-1969! Louise A. Jackson. Part V Crises of Policing: Blue-collar job! blue-collar career: policemen's perplexing struggle for a voice in Birmingham! Liver ...