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Through the lens of South Wales Police, this volume reflects upon
the changing role of the police in society. Conceptually, by
connecting the pasts, presents and futures of policing, each
chapter individually and collectively demonstrates how some of
today’s challenges and controversies about policing in the UK are
deep-seated. Uniquely co-authored by a blend of police
practitioners and expert academics, Policing Yesterday, Today,
Tomorrow explores how a range of social, political and economic
influences impact upon the contemporary organisation and conduct of
police work. Key topics covered across the chapters, include
community and neighbourhood policing; major crime investigation;
police finances; violence prevention; gender and policing; police
technologies; and leadership.Â
Millions of people worldwide practice t'ai chi, the most popular
form of which was codified beginning in the 1960s by Cheng Man
Ch'ing. In this scholarly yet practical book, Professor Cheng shows
precisely how the postures and moves of t'ai chi work, with
examples from anatomy and physics, both internally as energetic
principles and externally on opponents. He clarifies the spheres,
triangles, and centripetal and centrifugal forces within physical
exchanges such as push-hands. Contrasting Western and Chinese
techniques of healing, he also explores the relationships of organs
to one another in pathology and the necessary dynamics of
treatment. Professor Cheng explains how the practitioner may serve
as his or her own doctor and, likewise, as the physician or trainer
of an attacker. The martial arts, he says, are not a special case
of unusual power, simply an aspect of adapting natural and cosmic
law to circumstance. This edition of the classic text contains 13
major essays; oral secrets from Cheng's teacher Yang Cheng'fu; a
Q&A with commentary on martial arts classics; the author's
application and functions of each of the 37 postures of the short
form, with the original photographs of him as a young man; two
prefaces; and much more.
Investigating Murder provides a unique insight into how police detectives investigate and solve murders. Based upon observation of murder squads at work, interviews with detectives and detailed analysis of police case files, it provides an original and innovative account of the practices and processes involved in the investigation of serious violent crimes, as well as some of the problems that are often encountered in the conduct of this work.
How do individuals, communities, and institutions react to crime,
disorder, and social control events? How do such incidents shape
the contours of social order and the make-up of society? Why do
some crimes and disorders matter more than others in influencing
how we think, feel, and act about our security? These are the
questions that lie at the heart of Signal Crimes: Social Reactions
to Crime, Disorder, and Control. Signal Crimes: Social Reactions to
Crime, Disorder, and Signal Crimes brings together the key insights
and findings from a ten-year programme of fieldwork investigating
the concept of a 'signal crime': an incident that changes how
people think, feel and behave about their safety due to it
functioning as a signal of the presence of wider risks and threats.
Presenting ground-breaking new perspectives on social reactions to
crime, Signal Crimes innovatively and rigorously examines how and
why particular events trigger certain forms of reaction, and how
these unfold and develop across social space and time. This
includes detailed studies of: how fear travels within and across
communities in the aftermath of criminal homicides; the ways
rumours impact upon what we think about the prevalence and
distribution of crime; the extent to which some individuals and
neighbourhoods are vulnerable to being harmed more by disorder than
others; how the conduct of counter-terrorism has been altered in
recent years by the institutional effects of a number of signal
events; and the ways in which social control interventions are used
to communicate messages to public audiences. Through examination of
these diverse issues and using a range of both historical and
contemporary sources, the author reveals how our individual and
collective responses to problematic behaviour are organised. If a
perspective constitutes a way of seeing, then the signal crimes
perspective provides a new set of optics for how we see the impacts
of crime, disorder, and control. Showcasing the development of this
new concept, Signal Crimes argues for a radical and challenging
understanding of how we think not only about the crime, but also
about the ways in which we perceive and react to such problematic
and troubling acts.
How do individuals, communities, and institutions react to crime,
disorder, and social control events? How do such incidents shape
the contours of social order and the make-up of society? Why do
some crimes and disorders matter more than others in influencing
how we think, feel, and act about our security? These are the
questions that lie at the heart of Signal Crimes: Social Reactions
to Crime, Disorder, and Control. Signal Crimes brings together the
key insights and findings from a ten-year programme of fieldwork
investigating the concept of a 'signal crime': an incident that
changes how people think, feel and behave about their safety due to
it functioning as a signal of the presence of wider risks and
threats. Presenting ground-breaking new perspectives on social
reactions to crime, Signal Crimes innovatively and rigorously
examines how and why particular events trigger certain forms of
reaction, and how these unfold and develop across social space and
time. This includes detailed studies of: how fear travels within
and across communities in the aftermath of criminal homicides; the
ways rumours impact upon what we think about the prevalence and
distribution of crime; the extent to which some individuals and
neighbourhoods are vulnerable to being harmed more by disorder than
others; how the conduct of counter-terrorism has been altered in
recent years by the institutional effects of a number of signal
events; and the ways in which social control interventions are used
to communicate messages to public audiences. Through examination of
these diverse issues and using a range of both historical and
contemporary sources, the author reveals how our individual and
collective responses to problematic behaviour are organised. If a
perspective constitutes a way of seeing, then the signal crimes
perspective provides a new set of optics for how we see the impacts
of crime, disorder, and control. Showcasing the development of this
new concept, Signal Crimes argues for a radical and challenging
understanding of how we think not only about the crime, but also
about the ways in which we perceive and react to such problematic
and troubling acts.
Neighbourhood policing is one of the most significant and high
profile innovations in UK policing in recent times. It has also
been one of the most successful, garnering widespread political and
public support for its objectives and the processes of policing
that it has sought to embed. Indeed, it has recently been described
as the 'bedrock' of the British policing model. But it was not
always so lauded. At the time of its initial development it
encountered considerable opposition and scepticism from both within
and outside of the police. This book tells the story of how and why
the neighbourhood policing model was originally designed and
implemented, and then, what has led to a decline in its prominence
in terms of everyday police practice. To do this, Neighbourhood
Policing draws upon unparalleled empirical data from the authors'
ten-year programme of research to provide unique and compelling
insights into the key practices and processes associated with the
concept and implementation of neighbourhood policing. The chapters
describe how: key processes and practices have evolved and matured;
the ways neighbourhood policing delivers a range of local policing
services; as well as how, in some towns and cities, it has provided
a platform for tackling violent extremism and organised crime. This
approach is used to set out a broader analytic frame that addresses
the conditions under which innovative policing models emerge, are
developed and decline. In so doing, the book engages with wider and
deeper questions about the police function in contemporary society.
*Provides a clear, yet panoramic analysis of how the concept of
social control has been used by different theoretical traditions in
the social sciences.
*Connects contemporary changes in areas such as policing, penal
systems and surveillance, with wider and deeper changes in the
constitution of society.
*Employs empirical examples to illustrate key conceptual
points.
*Develops an innovative argument about the nature and scope of
social control in late-modern societies.
Understanding Social Control investigates how the concept of social
control has been used to capture the ways in which individuals,
communities and societies respond to a variety of forms of deviant
behaviour. In so doing, the book demonstrates how an appreciation
of the meanings of the concept of social control is vital to
understanding the dynamics and trajectories of social order in
contemporary late-modern societies. Through an analysis of a range
of different modes of social control including: policing,
imprisonment, surveillance, risk management, audit and
architecture, this book explores how and why the mechanisms and
processes of social control are changing. The book will be of
interest to those studying courses in criminology and the social
sciences, researchers with interests in the sociology of deviance
and social control, and readers who want to understand the social
forces that are shaping the world they live in.
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