Witness Seminar 7: Plymouth City Policewomen’s Department Co-Ordinator: Professor Kim Stevenson Chair: Professor Judith Rowbotham Consultant: Michael Kandiah, Kings College London Aim: to examine the role of Plymouth City Policewomen’s Department prior to amalgamation by capturing oral testimony from the retired policewomen who served there in the 1960s and 1970s and preserve the heritage of the Devon and Cornwall Police for future generations. Overview: The event was hosted by the University of Plymouth with the Plymouth policewomen’s branch of NARPO ( National Association Retired Police Officers). Nancy Astor was instrumental in the local campaign for more women police in the 1930s together with Dr Mabel Ramsay and Ch...
Dr Iain Channing produced a Post-PACE Timeline listing the respective Chief Constables of Devon and ...
In the study of nineteenth-century policing and crime, south-west England has largely been neglected...
This recording forms part of a collection of interviews with UTAS staff, former staff and alumni stu...
Organiser: Professor Kim Stevenson, Professor of SocioLegal History, School of Law, Criminology and...
Additional Contextual Material Dr Iain Channing produced a Post-PACE Timeline listing the resp...
University of Plymouth in association with the Institute for Contemporary British History, King’s Co...
On Saturday 14 November 2015 Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery hosted an event which formed part ...
University of Plymouth in association with the Institute for Contemporary British History, King’s Co...
Methodology: After the study received ethical approval from the Faculty of Business Ethics Committee...
Our research project was concerned primarily with using a feminist analysis to explore the lived rea...
University of Plymouth in association with the Institute for Contemporary British History, King’s Co...
2Policing is one of the world’s most masculinised occupations. Policing grew (with few exceptions) f...
This is a video of a lecture given by Betsy Stanko at LSE on 11 March 2014, in which she presents th...
This inspiring, well organised, and well attended day was the third and, sadly, the last of three ex...
One hundred women became police officers of the Philadelphia Police Department in mid-1970s. This wa...
Dr Iain Channing produced a Post-PACE Timeline listing the respective Chief Constables of Devon and ...
In the study of nineteenth-century policing and crime, south-west England has largely been neglected...
This recording forms part of a collection of interviews with UTAS staff, former staff and alumni stu...
Organiser: Professor Kim Stevenson, Professor of SocioLegal History, School of Law, Criminology and...
Additional Contextual Material Dr Iain Channing produced a Post-PACE Timeline listing the resp...
University of Plymouth in association with the Institute for Contemporary British History, King’s Co...
On Saturday 14 November 2015 Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery hosted an event which formed part ...
University of Plymouth in association with the Institute for Contemporary British History, King’s Co...
Methodology: After the study received ethical approval from the Faculty of Business Ethics Committee...
Our research project was concerned primarily with using a feminist analysis to explore the lived rea...
University of Plymouth in association with the Institute for Contemporary British History, King’s Co...
2Policing is one of the world’s most masculinised occupations. Policing grew (with few exceptions) f...
This is a video of a lecture given by Betsy Stanko at LSE on 11 March 2014, in which she presents th...
This inspiring, well organised, and well attended day was the third and, sadly, the last of three ex...
One hundred women became police officers of the Philadelphia Police Department in mid-1970s. This wa...
Dr Iain Channing produced a Post-PACE Timeline listing the respective Chief Constables of Devon and ...
In the study of nineteenth-century policing and crime, south-west England has largely been neglected...
This recording forms part of a collection of interviews with UTAS staff, former staff and alumni stu...