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Policing and Public Trust

Exposing the Inner Uniform
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Since its inception in the late nineteenth century, the prevailing ethos of the police institution in Britain, has been said to rest on Sir Robert Peel's mantra of 1829 that 'the police are the public and the public are the police'. This refrain, of policing by consent, has constantly been challenged and no more so than in recent years. Whilst public views of policing in Britain maintain a constant level of trust, according to opinion polls, little attention is given as to why 40% of the population remain mistrustful of policing services. Though much of this book is confined to police operations in the United Kingdom, especially with regard to the narratives of those whose interviews were transcribed as case studies, the extent to which the modern police service sets itself apart from the public (and is therefore non-consensual) is shown in policing practices across the globe, from the United States to Australia. With stories from people on the front line, who have been targeted by police, Dr. Eccy de Jonge examines how police agencies' self-referential attitude - their "inner uniform" - may lead to bias in policing investigations, a breakdown in social order, and a lack of public trust. This is exacerbated by police officers using their power of discretion to subdue a right to criticism. Victims and complainants are routinely discredited by policing agencies around the globe and the inner workings of this public institution are failing those who rely upon it the most.
Eccy de Jonge is philosopher, writing and author of Spinoza and Deep Ecology and Reinstating the Infinite.
Chapter 1: Discrediting Victims and Complainants Discrediting Tactics Identifying the Subject Hillsborough Anti Social Behaviour: The Story of Kay Police Attitudes Chapter 2: The Meaning of Bias in Police Investigations Implicit Bias Confirmation Bias The Reid Technique Miscarriages of Justice and Wrongful Arrest Avoiding Bias: Resolutions and Suggestions Chapter 3: Covert Policing Spycops Covert Records and Databases Police and Family Liaison Officers Covert Diagnoses: Case Studies Chapter 4: Road Deaths Police Investigations into Road Deaths Testaments of Victims Policing Attitudes Chapter 5: Police Support Networks Coroners, Inquests and Pathologists The Crown Prosecution Service Case Study: A False Charge of Rape Chapter 6: Accountability: A Grey Area The Police Complaints System Respondents Public Relations Policing Culture Conclusion
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