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This book is concerned with the origins of the often difficult
relationship between the Metropolitan Police and London's West
Indian community, and is the first detailed account of the
relationship between them during the crucial early decades of
largescale immigration. It shows how and why the early seeds of
mistrust between police and black immigrants were sown, culminating
in the subsequent riots and public enquiries - in particular the
Scarman and MacPherson enquiries. Drawing upon a wide range of
interviews as well as detailed archival research, this book also
sheds new light on the relationship between the Home Secretary and
the Metropolitan Police Commissioner in the post-war period, the
cultures and subcultures within the Met and the different
priorities to be found within its rank structure; the nature of
cultural and ethnic prejudice in the Met at the time; its
self-imposed alienation from the community it served; and the Met's
lack of commitment at the highest level to community and race
relations training. All these issues are examined in the broader
context of British society in the 1950s and 1960s, providing a
prism through which to explore the broader context of race
relations in Britain in the post-war period.
This book is concerned with the origins of the often difficult
relationship between the Metropolitan Police and London's West
Indian community, and is the first detailed account of the
relationship between them during the crucial early decades of
largescale immigration. It shows how and why the early seeds of
mistrust between police and black immigrants were sown, culminating
in the subsequent riots and public enquiries - in particular the
Scarman and MacPherson enquiries. Drawing upon a wide range of
interviews as well as detailed archival research, this book also
sheds new light on the relationship between the Home Secretary and
the Metropolitan Police Commissioner in the post-war period, the
cultures and subcultures within the Met and the different
priorities to be found within its rank structure; the nature of
cultural and ethnic prejudice in the Met at the time; its
self-imposed alienation from the community it served; and the Met's
lack of commitment at the highest level to community and race
relations training. All these issues are examined in the broader
context of British society in the 1950s and 1960s, providing a
prism through which to explore the broader context of race
relations in Britain in the post-war period.
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Everyman (Paperback)
James Whitfield Ellison
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R333
Discovery Miles 3 330
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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