|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Government has been radically transformed over the past few decades. These transformations have been mirrored in, and often prefigured by, changes in the governance of security - mentalities, institutions, technologies and practices used to promote secure environments. This book traces the nature of these governmental changes by looking at security. It examines a variety of related questions, including:
* What significant changes have occurred in the governance of security? * What implications do these changes have for collective life? * What new imaginings may be needed to reshape security? * What ethical factors need to be considered in formulating such new imaginings?
The authors conclude bringing together descriptive, explanatory and normative considerations to access how justice can be conceived within the governance of security.
Government has been radically transformed over the past few decades. These transformations have been mirrored in, and often prefigured by, changes in the governance of security - mentalities, institutions, technologies and practices used to promote secure environments. This book traces the nature of these governmental changes by looking at security. It examines a variety of related questions, including:
* What significant changes have occurred in the governance of security? * What implications do these changes have for collective life? * What new imaginings may be needed to reshape security? * What ethical factors need to be considered in formulating such new imaginings?
The authors conclude bringing together descriptive, explanatory and normative considerations to access how justice can be conceived within the governance of security.
The state police force of South Africa has acquired massive
notoriety since its formation. Its officers have developed a
reputation for routinely provoking violence and torturing suspects.
As the key bastion of apartheid, it is in urgent need of change. In
"Policing for a New South Africa", Mike Brogden and Clifford
Shearing evaluate the options for change. They critically analyze
orthodox policing ideas imported from the West and contrast them
with the indigenous model of independent policing from the
townships of South Africa itself. Together, they offer significant
possibilities for the future. Importantly, they suggest that rather
than South Africans importing ideas wholesale from the West, the
latter countries, in the light of the failures of their own police
systems have much to learn from South Africa.
`... the book is worth reading for anyone interested in the building of the new police frce for the changing South Africa and in policing in other countries.' - New Community
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|