Tackling tradition: reform and modernisation of the British police

2003 
Relative to both the rest of the criminal justice sector and to the British public sector as a whole, the police service has managed to maintain many of its traditional features and to survive the most radical dimensions of public-sector reforms inflicted on other areas of the public sector. This paper examines the track record of attempts to develop reform agendas within British policing and, in turn, the extent to which the policing sector has been "reform resistant' over time. It argues that, in so far as the policing sector has managed to remain unfettered by much of the public-sector reform agenda which has impacted on other areas, this rests largely of the construction of "law-and-order politics'. The police occupy a pivotal position within the politics of law and order as the (perceived) "front line' in the fight against crime. The more a government or party chooses to employ the rhetoric and "law and order' the more they are drawn into a relationship of compromise with the policing sector and, in ...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    11
    References
    24
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []