<i>Exporting British Policing</i> offers a novel and valuable insight into British police methods and practices, as they were applied overseas in the challenging conditions of wartime campaigns and postwar occupation.

Journal of Modern History

Emsley’s account provides an important foundation for historians of both policing and war to think about the role officers play during wartime and the ways in which that service translated in terms of limitations and opportunities for officers when they returned home.

H-War

As one might expect with Clive, this is no dry academic study but a lively account of a previously unrecorded aspect of British police history.

Police History Society Newsletter

Se alle

A rare example of detailed scholarship, lively text, and the uncovering of a very under-researched aspect of British policing. This is the culmination of a long period of archival digging, and has the usual Emsley hallmark of quality: diligent research, expansive and innovative theories, and some wonderfully interesting contemporary quotes from the archives to illustrate his points. A great read.

Barry Godfrey, Associate Pro Vice Chancellor, University of Liverpool, UK

In <i>Exporting British Policing</i>, Clive Emsley, our foremost historian of the British Bobby, gives us a fascinating and meticulously researched account of the work of Civil Affairs and Special Investigation Branch officers during the Second World War. Deftly told, his book sheds light on a vital element of the Allied military element and on some of the less salubrious chapters of Britain's war.

Alan Allport, Associate Professor of History, Syracuse University, USA

Exporting British Policing is a comprehensive study of British military policing in liberated Europe during the Second World War. Preventing and detecting thefts, receiving and profiteering together with the maintenance of order in its broadest sense are, in the peacetime world, generally confided to the police. However, the Second World War witnessed the use of civilian police to create a detective division of the British Army’s Military Police (SIB), and the use of British civilian police, alongside American police, as Civil Affairs Officers to restore order and civil administration. Part One follows the men of the SIB from their pre-war careers to confrontations with mafiosi and their investigations into widespread organised crime and war crimes during which they were constantly hampered by being seen as a Cinderella service commanded by ‘temporary gentlemen’. Part Two focuses on the police officers who served in Civil Affairs who tended to come from higher ranks in the civilian police than those who served in SIB. During the war they occupied towns with the assault troops, and then sought to reorganise local administration; at the end of the war in the British Zones of Germany and Austria they sought to turn both new Schutzmänner and police veterans of the Third Reich into British Bobbies. Using memoirs and anecdotes, Emsley critically draws on the subjective experiences of these police personnel, assessing the successes of these wartime efforts for preventing and investigating crimes such as theft and profiteering and highlighting the importance of historical precedent, given current difficulties faced by international policing organizations in enforcing democratic police reform in post-conflict societies.
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1. Introduction2. The Origins of SIB3. The Mediterranean Theatre4. D-Day to Berlin5. ‘Dickie’ Hearn and 62 Special Investigations Section6. Planning for Liberation and Occupation7. The Italian Job8. The Greek Imbroglio9. North West Europe10. Coming Home
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Surveys the use of British Police Officers to apprehend offenders and to establish and maintain order in the Middle East, Italy and North-West Europe both during and in the aftermath of the Second World War.
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Explores a little known, but key element of British wartime activity

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350025011
Publisert
2017-07-13
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Vekt
525 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

Forfatter

Biographical note

Clive Emsley is Emeritus Professor of History at the Open University, UK. He was President of the International Association for the History of Crime and Criminal Justice for 10 years. His books include Crime and Society in England, 1750-1900 (4th edition, 2010), Gendarmes and the State in Nineteenth-Century Europe (1999) and The English Police: A Political and Social History (1996).