â˛A lucid, comprehensive and stimulating state-of-the-art analysis of the bewilderingly complex contemporary changes in policing. This will be a standard resource for students and scholars of policing for a long time to come.Ⲡ- <br /><b><b>Robert Reiner, Professor of Criminology<br />London School of Economics and Political Science</b>
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<p><b>â˛Highly original, The New Policing is a significant contribution whose implications extend well beyond the British context and reflect on contemporary policing across the English-speaking world<b>.Ⲡ- <br /><b>Pat OâMalley<br />Canada Research Chair in Criminology and Criminal Justice, Carleton University, Canada</b> </b></b></p>
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<p><b><b>â˛Deeply informed, penetrating, challenging and readable. Eugene McLaughlin analyses â˛the state weâ˛re inⲠwith respect to policingⲠ- <br /><b><b>P.A.J. Waddington, Professor of Political Sociology<br />University of Reading, UK</b> </b></b></b></p>
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<p><b><b><b>â˛The landscape of police and policing is rapidly changing. McLaughlin locates this change in the media imagery of policing and in the very real fragmented, global context of contemporary policing. When I got to the end, I wanted the debate to continue. This book is valuable in taking our discussions about policing and policing from a clear documentation of how much has changed in policing England and Wales in the last 20 years.Ⲡ- <br /><b><b>Elizabeth Stanko</b> </b></b></b></b></p>
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