Main Critiquing Evidence-Based Policing in Britain: A Genealogy

Critiquing Evidence-Based Policing in Britain: A Genealogy

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Evidence Based Policing (EBP) exerts significant influence on how actors think, act and speak about UK policing to the point that it is becoming institutionalised. Inspired by the insights of Michel Foucault into power-knowledge, governmentality and institutional reform over time, this book provides a comprehensive account of the emergence of EBP in Britain as well as original discourse analysis and analytical research into the texts produced by EBP. It presents a new history of EBP presented around EBP's story-lines, subject positions and the institutional changes it has created. This history shows EBP shares a genealogical heritage with modern discourses of managerialism and neoliberalism. EBP's roots are traced and it is re-presented as an extension of the problematic relationship in the production of criminological knowledge and the British state. This history fundamentally challenges the notion on which EBP rests: basing policing policy upon independent, robust knowledge. Instead this book argues EBP should be subject to greater illumination and challenge, suggesting EBP is a contestable device that is doing political work. It speaks to those interested in policing, critical criminology and political science.
Request Code : ZLIBIO4355259
Categories:
Year:
2024
Publisher:
Palgrave Macmillan
Language:
English
Pages:
324
ISBN 10:
3031592948
ISBN 13:
9783031592942
ISBN:
3031592948,9783031592942
Series:
Critical Criminological Perspectives

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