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Professionalizing the Police - The Unfulfilled Promise of Police Training (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,282
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Professionalizing the Police - The Unfulfilled Promise of Police Training (Hardcover)
Series: Clarendon Studies in Criminology
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Professionalizing the Police is a timely reassessment of the
development of British police training and its contribution to the
furtherance of the police professionalism agenda. The police have
long struggled with the concept of professionalism. The Victorians
veered from regarding police as servants to sanctifying policing as
a special calling, while the supposed Golden Age of Policing was
riven by divisions of class as sharp as those of the social
diversity that poses one of contemporary policing's harshest tests.
Police training has reflected these ambiguities and uncertainties.
The ground its curriculum covers, pedagogy it employs, and
structures through which it operates have been contested,
troublesome to manage, and blamed for policing's failures. Behind
these frictions lie large issues of governance, policing's place in
society and what it means to be professional. Late modernity is
marked by uncertainty and scepticism. In 'post-truth' times,
professionalism must accommodate ambiguities of class, ethnicity
and sexuality. The police languish as last believers in a
monochrome vision of society while the norms that make for
contemporary sociality have moved on to a multiplex of diversities
that harbour new extremes both of tolerance and intolerance. True
professionalism alerts practitioners to other ways of delivering
social control and just societies: empowering citizens and
encouraging autonomy; supporting new modes of social relationships
and lifestyle; fitting provision to cases; pluralizing services.
This yardstick is used to assess and challenge the recruit and
in-service curriculum and to tease out the options around which
professionalism can be configured and embedded such that it plays
its part in a humane, coherent, and accountable framework of police
governance. The book will appeal to academics and postgraduate
students in police research (across criminology, sociology,
psychology, socio-legal studies) and the professions (sociology,
political science), as well as senior police managers and trainers
in the police service and other applied government bodies.
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