Theresa May, the Home Secretary, has launched radical reforms of the police service, already the hardest hit of all public services. Why have the police plunged in political clout sufficiently to make the deep transformation in their resources and powers possible? The bottom line, writes Robert Reiner, is that the powerful are simply less dependent on public police protection, benefiting from bespoke services that are cheaper than extending universal guardianship to all citizens
Relations between the government and the police have further deteriorated in the aftermath of the re...
The police were not spared the axe in last year’s Comprehensive Spending Review, with 20 per cent bu...
John van Reenen, Nicholas Bloom, Scott Baker and Steven Davis argue that one of the factors behind t...
HMIC has just published a review that is strongly critical of ‘stop and search’, the controversial p...
There must be an election coming. The current debate in Britain about the politicisation of the poli...
The recent riots in London and other English cities have thrown the government’s plans for reforming...
Today, the Independent Police Commission released a report recommending reform of the police service...
The police service has come under strain from funding and personnel reductions over recent years, de...
Throughout the Nineteenth Century and well into the Twentieth, police power was largely seen as a re...
The British police service is currently going through a radical transformation phase. The present To...
Barry Loveday provides an overview of the state of policing in England and Wales. He highlights the ...
The Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) elections in November 2012 marked a historic change in the d...
Purpose This chapter is devoted to analysing the historical peculiarity of the contemporary British ...
As part of the coalition government’s spending review the police budget will drop from £9.7 billion ...
Last week the report of the Independent Police Commission, led by the former Metropolitan Police Com...
Relations between the government and the police have further deteriorated in the aftermath of the re...
The police were not spared the axe in last year’s Comprehensive Spending Review, with 20 per cent bu...
John van Reenen, Nicholas Bloom, Scott Baker and Steven Davis argue that one of the factors behind t...
HMIC has just published a review that is strongly critical of ‘stop and search’, the controversial p...
There must be an election coming. The current debate in Britain about the politicisation of the poli...
The recent riots in London and other English cities have thrown the government’s plans for reforming...
Today, the Independent Police Commission released a report recommending reform of the police service...
The police service has come under strain from funding and personnel reductions over recent years, de...
Throughout the Nineteenth Century and well into the Twentieth, police power was largely seen as a re...
The British police service is currently going through a radical transformation phase. The present To...
Barry Loveday provides an overview of the state of policing in England and Wales. He highlights the ...
The Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) elections in November 2012 marked a historic change in the d...
Purpose This chapter is devoted to analysing the historical peculiarity of the contemporary British ...
As part of the coalition government’s spending review the police budget will drop from £9.7 billion ...
Last week the report of the Independent Police Commission, led by the former Metropolitan Police Com...
Relations between the government and the police have further deteriorated in the aftermath of the re...
The police were not spared the axe in last year’s Comprehensive Spending Review, with 20 per cent bu...
John van Reenen, Nicholas Bloom, Scott Baker and Steven Davis argue that one of the factors behind t...