CCJ 101 Lecture Notes - Parish Constable, Metropolitan Police Service, Peelian Principles

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8 Dec 2022
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Unarmed, unpaid, and part-time: shire reeves: precursors to sheriff, watchmen: used to protect property in larger communities in england and colonial. Patrolled at night to protect community from robberies, fires, and other disturbances thief takers: hired by victims to capture offenders for a bounty; often corrupt: the metropolitan police act of 1829. Bobbies (or peelers): officers that replaced existing and corrupt system of parish constables and night watchmen: peelian principles: widely cited list describing peel"s alleged philosophy, new police instructions in newspapers: Use of physical force only when necessary. Colonial america and policing: resembled english system: preference for minimal, local policing formalized positions, appointed by governors and held by large landowners to protect their own lands. Parish constables: maintained equipment for each hundred. Collecting taxes: colonial sheriffs policed reactively. Enforcement of law was selective and unequal. Citizens did not necessarily want the laws enforced. Advancing professionalism in policing: august vollmer: the father of american policing.

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