The Women Police Service was unique as a feminist organization
dedicated to the supervision and control of women themselves.
Formed in 1914 by middle-class veterans of the militant suffrage
campaign in Britain, at odds throughout its history with both the
authorities and mainstream feminist organizations and frequently
operating in defiance of the law, the WPS combined authoritarianism
and feminist activism to create its own distinctive concept of
policing between the world wars.
As would-be members of a national women police force, the WPS
hoped to shield women and children from the impact of a
male-dominated criminal justice system while simultaneously
enforcing upon them its own rigorous moral code. As ex-suffragettes
whose disillusionment with the minimal progress achieved through
the concession of the franchise accelerated in the 1920s and 1930s,
members of the corps became increasingly alienated from the state
they aspired to serve. These conflicting impulses culminated in the
movement's final metamorphosis into a right-wing paramilitary force
allied with Sir Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists. This
first systematic study of the history of the WPS offers a unique
perspective from which to examine sexual, political, and class
ideologies that have received little attention in existing
histories of modern British feminism.
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