This article examines the response of the Home Office and the Metropolitan Police to mass demonstrations in 1968. Using a variety of contemporaneous sources, including underused archival material, documents released through freedom of information requests, and evidence disclosed as part of the ongoing Undercover Policing Inquiry (UCPI), it shows how the experience of mass demonstrations that year, which came against the backdrop of widespread international protest, prompted significant developments in terms of crowd control tactics, covert intelligence gathering practices and the use of new technology to enable greater command and control over police resources. Taken together, these measures represented a permanent change to the public orde...
The spectre of environmental ‘domestic extremism’ has long been postulated by police leaders and sec...
This article discusses two research projects that have used the Promotion of Access to Information A...
This article seeks to consider the value of critical ethnography for the study of policing. Specific...
This article examines the response of the Home Office and the Metropolitan Police to mass demonstrat...
In 1983, the British police adopted their first public order policing manual, laying the foundations...
In light of increasing concerns in relation to police accountability, this article reviews the histo...
This article focuses on the recent academic assertion that police attempts to engage in dialogue bef...
This article offers a first academic evaluation of the Special Demonstration Squad and the National ...
In recent years public order policing policy in England and Wales has undergone significant changes....
Public order policing is about power and control. The preservation and maintenance of order is a def...
This article aims to discuss the difficult policing position of attempting to facilitate legitimate ...
Paper presented to the Institute of Historical Research October 2018Professor Judith Rowbotham prese...
In October 2016, the Home Secretary ruled out a public inquiry into the ‘Battle of Orgreave', arguin...
We use speech act theory to study the U.K. state’s response to large-scale public disorder across En...
We use speech act theory to study the U.K. state’s response to large-scale public disorder across En...
The spectre of environmental ‘domestic extremism’ has long been postulated by police leaders and sec...
This article discusses two research projects that have used the Promotion of Access to Information A...
This article seeks to consider the value of critical ethnography for the study of policing. Specific...
This article examines the response of the Home Office and the Metropolitan Police to mass demonstrat...
In 1983, the British police adopted their first public order policing manual, laying the foundations...
In light of increasing concerns in relation to police accountability, this article reviews the histo...
This article focuses on the recent academic assertion that police attempts to engage in dialogue bef...
This article offers a first academic evaluation of the Special Demonstration Squad and the National ...
In recent years public order policing policy in England and Wales has undergone significant changes....
Public order policing is about power and control. The preservation and maintenance of order is a def...
This article aims to discuss the difficult policing position of attempting to facilitate legitimate ...
Paper presented to the Institute of Historical Research October 2018Professor Judith Rowbotham prese...
In October 2016, the Home Secretary ruled out a public inquiry into the ‘Battle of Orgreave', arguin...
We use speech act theory to study the U.K. state’s response to large-scale public disorder across En...
We use speech act theory to study the U.K. state’s response to large-scale public disorder across En...
The spectre of environmental ‘domestic extremism’ has long been postulated by police leaders and sec...
This article discusses two research projects that have used the Promotion of Access to Information A...
This article seeks to consider the value of critical ethnography for the study of policing. Specific...