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| List of Tables and Figures | p. viii |
| Acknowledgments | p. ix |
| Permissions | p. xi |
| Explaining the Police | p. 1 |
| The Anomaly of the Police | p. 3 |
| Sociology and Criminology | p. 4 |
| Some Conceptual Issues | p. 6 |
| The Trials and Tribulations of Police Authority | p. 11 |
| Bittner's Principle | p. 16 |
| An Overview of the Book | p. 18 | ... MORE
| Three Eras of Policing | p. 25 |
| Early Policing in London | p. 26 |
| The American Situation | p. 28 |
| Political Spoils | p. 29 |
| Reform and Early Professionalization | p. 31 |
| Community Policing | p. 36 |
| Conclusion | p. 46 |
| Policing in the Wild West | p. 49 |
| The Concept of the Frontier | p. 52 |
| Lewis and Clark, and Beyond | p. 54 |
| Growing Populations, Army Intervention, and Territorial Policing | p. 55 |
| Frontier Towns, Instability, and Lawlessness | p. 58 |
| The Code of the West | p. 60 |
| The Case of Wichita, Kansas | p. 63 |
| Conclusion | p. 65 |
| Integrity Testing and the Decision to Arrest | p. 69 |
| Why Integrity Testing? | p. 71 |
| Examples of Integrity Tests | p. 73 |
| Ethics of Integrity Testing | p. 74 |
| The Decision to Arrest | p. 76 |
| Conclusion | p. 84 |
| Post 9-11 Policing: A Functional Analysis | p. 87 |
| An Overview of Findings and Recommendations | p. 88 |
| Community Policing and Beyond | p. 89 |
| A Look at the New Paradigm of Policing: The Post 9-11 Model | p. 90 |
| Institutionalism versus Functionalism | p. 92 |
| Introducing Parsons' AGIL Schema | p. 95 |
| Cybernetics and the Criminal Justice System | p. 99 |
| The Post 9-11 Model in Relation to Police Functions | p. 103 |
| Implementing Post 9-11 Policing | p. 107 |
| Conclusion: Where Do We Go from Here? | p. 110 |
| Elements of Police Discretion | p. 115 |
| Factors in the Production of Discretion | p. 117 |
| Increased Discretion with Role Diversity | p. 120 |
| Decision Points in Police Discretion | p. 121 |
| Eleven Working Rules for Police | p. 123 |
| Can or Should Discretion Be Controlled? | p. 130 |
| The Concept of Proactivity: From Indirect Conation to Modern Municipal Policing | p. 135 |
| Preliminaries: The Beginnings of Proactivity | p. 135 |
| True Beginnings: Lester F. Ward and Conation | p. 137 |
| Ogburn and the Project of Social Prediction | p. 140 |
| Proactivity in the 1950s and 1960s: Small Group and Communications Research | p. 142 |
| Meso- and Macro-Levels | p. 143 |
| Proactivity and Public Health | p. 144 |
| Proactive Policing: A Beginning | p. 146 |
| Negative and Positive Police Proactivity | p. 148 |
| Summary and Conclusion | p. 150 |
| Police as Contact Men and Women | p. 155 |
| The Horizons of Patrol Work | p. 155 |
| The Emergence of Professional Policing in America | p. 157 |
| Police and Technology | p. 159 |
| Boundary-Spanning Structures and Activities in the Police Organization | p. 160 |
| Hirsch's Idea of the ôContact Manö | p. 162 |
| The Contact Man within Modern Police Organizations | p. 163 |
| Communities and Networks | p. 165 |
| Police as Contact Persons within the Community | p. 167 |
| Conclusion | p. 169 |
| Security and Private Policing | p. 173 |
| The Concept of Privacy | p. 174 |
| Back to the Wild West | p. 177 |
| Privacy and Security | p. 183 |
| Economics and Privatization | p. 186 |
| Conclusion | p. 194 |
| Police and Society: A Summary of Principles | p. 199 |
| p. 200 | |
| p. 201 | |
| p. 203 | |
| p. 204 | |
| p. 205 | |
| p. 207 | |
| p. 208 | |
| p. 209 | |
| p. 211 | |
| Bibliography | p. 215 |
| Index | p. 239 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |