ABSTRACT

This compilation represents the first study to examine the historical evolution and shifting global dynamics of policing across the Lusophone community. With contributions from a multi-disciplinary range of experts, it traces the role of policing within and across settings that are connected by the shared legacy of Portuguese colonialism. Previously neglected within studies of the globalisation of policing, the Lusophone experience brings novel insights to established analyses of colonial, post-colonial and transnational policing. This compilation draws research attention to the policing peculiarities of the Lusophone community. It proposes new cultural settings within which to test dominant theories of policing research. It uncovers an important piece of the jigsaw that is policing across the globe. Key research questions that it addresses include:
• What were the patterns of policing, and policing transfers, across Portuguese colonial settings?
• How did Portugal’s dual status as both fascist regime and imperial power shape its late colonial policing?
• What have been the different experiences of post-colonial and transitional policing across the former Portuguese colonies?
• In what ways are Lusophone nations contributing to, and indeed shaping, patterns of transnational policing?
• What comparative lessons can be drawn from the Lusophone policing experience?

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Policing and the Lusophone community across time and space

part One|73 pages

The colonial policing mission

part Two|71 pages

Policing at the end of Empire

chapter 5|24 pages

Knowing ‘Mozambican Islam’

The Confidential Questionnaire on Islam and colonial governance during the liberation war

chapter 6|23 pages

Intelligence-centric counterinsurgency as late colonial policing

Comparing Portugal with Britain and France

chapter |8 pages

Comment

Reflections on Portuguese late colonial policing

part Three|104 pages

Post-colonial, transitional and transnational policing dynamics

chapter 7|20 pages

Post-war police reform in Mozambique

The case of community policing

chapter 8|25 pages

Transformation of Macau policing

From a Portuguese colony to China’s SAR

chapter 9|19 pages

Faint echoes of Portugal but strong accents of Indonesia

Hidden influences on police development in Timor-Leste 1

chapter 10|26 pages

Branding Rio de Janeiro’s pacification model

A silver bullet for the planet of slums? 1

chapter |12 pages

Comment

‘Never mind the similarities, focus on the differences’: imposition, imitation and intransigence in post-colonial global policing reform