Women police: Gender, welfare and surveillance in the twentieth century
Women Police examines the professional roles, identities, activities and everyday experiences of women employed within the UK police service since the First World War against a backdrop of social and cultural change.

As the first in-depth historical study of women’s involvement in uniform, plain-clothes and undercover policing in the period before formal integration with male officers in the 1970s, it charts the relationship between gender, surveillance and penal-welfare strategies. For much of the twentieth century women police played a ‘specialist’ role in the detection and prevention of child abuse and neglect, the investigation of sexual violence and, in London, the regulation of prostitution. The book shows how women officers fashioned their own ‘feminine’ occupational culture and style of working in relation to male colleagues, other professionals and the women and children they encountered. Jackson concludes by examining experiences at the end of the twentieth century, comparing and contrasting the differing concepts of ‘equality’ that have shaped women’s involvement in the police service.

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Women police: Gender, welfare and surveillance in the twentieth century
Women Police examines the professional roles, identities, activities and everyday experiences of women employed within the UK police service since the First World War against a backdrop of social and cultural change.

As the first in-depth historical study of women’s involvement in uniform, plain-clothes and undercover policing in the period before formal integration with male officers in the 1970s, it charts the relationship between gender, surveillance and penal-welfare strategies. For much of the twentieth century women police played a ‘specialist’ role in the detection and prevention of child abuse and neglect, the investigation of sexual violence and, in London, the regulation of prostitution. The book shows how women officers fashioned their own ‘feminine’ occupational culture and style of working in relation to male colleagues, other professionals and the women and children they encountered. Jackson concludes by examining experiences at the end of the twentieth century, comparing and contrasting the differing concepts of ‘equality’ that have shaped women’s involvement in the police service.

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Women police: Gender, welfare and surveillance in the twentieth century

Women police: Gender, welfare and surveillance in the twentieth century

Women police: Gender, welfare and surveillance in the twentieth century

Women police: Gender, welfare and surveillance in the twentieth century

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$29.95 
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Overview

Women Police examines the professional roles, identities, activities and everyday experiences of women employed within the UK police service since the First World War against a backdrop of social and cultural change.

As the first in-depth historical study of women’s involvement in uniform, plain-clothes and undercover policing in the period before formal integration with male officers in the 1970s, it charts the relationship between gender, surveillance and penal-welfare strategies. For much of the twentieth century women police played a ‘specialist’ role in the detection and prevention of child abuse and neglect, the investigation of sexual violence and, in London, the regulation of prostitution. The book shows how women officers fashioned their own ‘feminine’ occupational culture and style of working in relation to male colleagues, other professionals and the women and children they encountered. Jackson concludes by examining experiences at the end of the twentieth century, comparing and contrasting the differing concepts of ‘equality’ that have shaped women’s involvement in the police service.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780719089107
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 12/01/2012
Series: Gender in History
Pages: 232
Sales rank: 679,205
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Louise A. Jackson is Lecturer in Modern Social History in the School of History and Classics, University of Edinburgh

Table of Contents

1. Introduction
2. Networks, structures and hierarchies
3. A respectable job for a woman?
4. Walking the beat
5. Going undercover
6. Policing the family: youth and welfare
7. Women, sexuality and the law
8. Beyond integration?
Bibliography
Index

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