Social Changes, Crime and Police

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border security cooperation
British Police Model
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Category=JKV
Collapsing State Institutions
comparative policing systems
crime and society
Criminal Policy
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnic Minority Officers
Ethnic Minority Police Officers
European crime
Ex-socialist Countries
fight against crime
Finnish Security Police
FRG.
GDR
GDR Economy
human rights policing
Hungarian Police
law and order
law enforcement reform
Migration News Sheet
Overburdening
Police Forces
policing in post-communist Europe
post-socialist criminology
post-socialist Europe
Private Security Services
Public Administrations
role of the police
Schengen II
social conditions for crime
Socialist GDR
transitional justice
UN
UNO
Violated
violent crime
West German
West Germany
White Collar Crime
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032456430
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1995, Social Changes, Crime and the Police studies the relationship of social change and crime, the role of the police amidst changing social conditions, and the reaction of society and the state to the criminal problem. It examines the essential differences and challenges which confronted countries in Western and Eastern Europe after the collapse of the socialist system.

In recent years, many areas of Europe had experienced a period of rapid technological development which had changed economic and cultural structures, creating temporary instability. Within a relatively short period of time traditional values and beliefs had been undermined. National boundaries and geographical differences had gradually lost their significance and the opening of frontiers had created easier conditions for crime. The nature of crime itself had been transformed by the increasingly close relationships between countries.

While many Eastern European countries sought to undo the authoritarian legacies of the socialist period, Western Europe faced new challenges to its urban order.

The editors and the contributors also examine the kinds of new policing concepts which may be formulated and the new practices which may develop during the next few decades. Governments must determine the role of the police and the law in accordance with public demands for powerful policing combined with consideration of the individual’s rights, thus maintaining the vital balance between personal freedom and social peace.