The book poses the questions: how do law and policing relate; and can police practices be significantly changed by means of legal regulation? In examining these questions, this book deals with issues which are at the heart of contemporary debates about policing. It contains empirical research from England and Australia in the context of the international policing literature, arguing that studies of policing need theoretical and comparative development. The structure of the book is as follows. The first chapter provides a detailed critical reading of three theoretical conceptions of law in policing which the author terms legalistic-bureaucratic, culturalist, and structural. Chapter two examines the concept of police powers, using historical material from England and Australia. The way in which empirical work can generate theoretical reconsideration is shown in Chapter three, which considers the ways in which legal regulation of policing may be evaded by obtaining a suspect's 'consent' to policing practices such as search and detention, and considers the implications of this for conceptions of policing. Chapters four and five focus on the key policing practice of custodial interrogation in, respectively, England and Australia. This leads, in Chapter six, to the long controversy about the right of silence (and to its severe restriction in the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994). It concludes with comments about the symbolic nature of the issue, the theoretical implications of the problems encountered in defining and counting instances of suspects using the right to silence, and the possible effects of the 1994 Act. The final chapter discusses how the practices and forms of law and policing intersect, relates law in policing to broader debates about regulation, the rule of law, and techniques of controlling power, and considers the limits and possibilities of using law to direct and control policing.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
It provides an excellent grounding in some of the theoretical perspectives on law and policing, while at the same time providing a framework in which to consider the wide range of research on police powers * Mark Button Labour Campaign for Criminal Justice Newsletter 49 * a well-informed, cogent, even magisterial, contribution to our understanding of both policing and law ... This is a fine book. It more than fulfils its ambition to combine theory, empirical research and policy analysis. It shows a proper regard for the sociological (and political) significance of unevenness and contigency. * Ian Loader, British Journal of Sociology. Vol 50 no3. *
Reihe
Sprache
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Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Maße
Höhe: 224 mm
Breite: 145 mm
Dicke: 25 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-19-826476-7 (9780198264767)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
David Dixon is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law at the University of New South Wales. He was previously Senior Lecturer in Law at Hull University. He has been a visiting Research Fellow at Rutgers University and is a consultant to The Royal Commission on the New South Wales Police Service.
Autor*in
Associate Professor at the Faculty of LawAssociate Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of New South Wales
1. Theories of Law in Policing ; 2. Police Powers: Law in the Books and Elsewhere ; 3. Policing by Law and Policing by Consent ; 4. Detention for Questioning in England and Wales ; 5. The Legal (Non)Regulation of Custodial Interrogation in New South Wales ; 6. Silent Suspects and Police Questions ; 7. Legality, Regulation and Policing