ABSTRACT

This volume is the first of four that will provide some of the most significant, English-language articles on the historical development of the police institution. The articles included in this volume are broadly of two kinds. The first introduce some of the theoretical outlines that have been suggested for the origins and development of modern police institutions across Europe. The second explore the systems of enforcement, and the criticisms of them, that had emerged on the eve of the revolutionary upheavals which convulsed Europe and inflicted a terminal blow to the ancien rome at the close of the eighteenth century.

part III|74 pages

Constables and Order in Early Modern England

part IV|222 pages

Policing Eighteenth-Century England

chapter 14|17 pages

Social Police and the Mechanisms of Prevention

Patrick Colquhoun and the Condition of Poverty

chapter 15|58 pages

Good men to Associate and Bad Men to Conspire

Associations for the Prosecution of Felons in England 1760–1860*