Description

Book Synopsis

This book argues that policing should be studied in a truly comparative manner as a way of identifying more accurately the diverse features of police organisations and the trends which affect contemporary policing. Studying policing comparatively is also a way to develop more sophisticated theories on the relations between police, state, and society aiming at higher degree of generalization. In particular, broadening the empirical basis, often limited to Western countries, favours the formulation of more encompassing theories. The comparative analysis, then, is used to refine meso or macro theories on various aspects of policing.

The book covers the challenges of comparative research in diverse areas of policing studies with innovative tools and approaches to allow for the development of that subfield of policing. It is a significant new contribution to policing studies, and will be a great resource for academics, researchers, and advanced students of Public Policy, Sociology,

Table of Contents

Introduction

Challenges and promises of comparative policing research

Jacques de Maillard and Sebastian Roché

Policing and the state: national paradigms, private security and citizens’ role

1. Plural policing, the public good, and the constitutional state: an international comparison of Austria and Canada – Ontario

Bas van Stokkom and Jan Terpstra

2. Comparing private security regulation in the European Union

Mark Button and Peter Stiernstedt

3. Citizen participation in community safety: a comparative study of community policing in South Korea and the UK

Kwan Choi and Ju-lak Lee

Comparing police–citizen relations: policies and practices

4. Under-regulated and unaccountable? Explaining variation in stop and search rates in Scotland, England and Wales

Genevieve Lennon and Kath Murray

5. Different styles of policing: discretionary power in street controls by the public police in France and Germany

Jacques de Maillard, Daniela Hunold, Sebastian Roché and Dietrich Oberwittler

Police legitimacy, democracy and integrity: the need for comparative instruments across contexts

6. Police legitimacy in Africa: a multilevel multinational analysis

Francis D. Boateng

7. Assessing the validity of police integrity scale in a comparative context

Jon Maskály, Sanja Kutnjak Ivković, Maria Haberfeld, Christopher Donner, Tiffany Chen and Michael Meyers

The Rise of Comparative Policing

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    A Paperback by Jacques de Maillard, Sebastian Roché

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      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 9/25/2023 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780367511043, 978-0367511043
      ISBN10: 0367511045

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book argues that policing should be studied in a truly comparative manner as a way of identifying more accurately the diverse features of police organisations and the trends which affect contemporary policing. Studying policing comparatively is also a way to develop more sophisticated theories on the relations between police, state, and society aiming at higher degree of generalization. In particular, broadening the empirical basis, often limited to Western countries, favours the formulation of more encompassing theories. The comparative analysis, then, is used to refine meso or macro theories on various aspects of policing.

      The book covers the challenges of comparative research in diverse areas of policing studies with innovative tools and approaches to allow for the development of that subfield of policing. It is a significant new contribution to policing studies, and will be a great resource for academics, researchers, and advanced students of Public Policy, Sociology,

      Table of Contents

      Introduction

      Challenges and promises of comparative policing research

      Jacques de Maillard and Sebastian Roché

      Policing and the state: national paradigms, private security and citizens’ role

      1. Plural policing, the public good, and the constitutional state: an international comparison of Austria and Canada – Ontario

      Bas van Stokkom and Jan Terpstra

      2. Comparing private security regulation in the European Union

      Mark Button and Peter Stiernstedt

      3. Citizen participation in community safety: a comparative study of community policing in South Korea and the UK

      Kwan Choi and Ju-lak Lee

      Comparing police–citizen relations: policies and practices

      4. Under-regulated and unaccountable? Explaining variation in stop and search rates in Scotland, England and Wales

      Genevieve Lennon and Kath Murray

      5. Different styles of policing: discretionary power in street controls by the public police in France and Germany

      Jacques de Maillard, Daniela Hunold, Sebastian Roché and Dietrich Oberwittler

      Police legitimacy, democracy and integrity: the need for comparative instruments across contexts

      6. Police legitimacy in Africa: a multilevel multinational analysis

      Francis D. Boateng

      7. Assessing the validity of police integrity scale in a comparative context

      Jon Maskály, Sanja Kutnjak Ivković, Maria Haberfeld, Christopher Donner, Tiffany Chen and Michael Meyers

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