Gender and Policing is an innovative study of the real world of street policing and the gender issues which are a central part of this. Derived from extensive ethnographic research (involving police responses to gangland shootings, high speed car chases as well as more routine policing activities), this book examines the way police attitudes and beliefs combine to perpetuate a working culture which is dependent upon traditional conceptions of 'male' and 'female'. In doing so it challenges previously held assumptions about the way women are harassed, manipulated and constrained, focusing rather on the more subtle impact of structures and norms within police culture.
Gender and Policing will be of interest to all those concerned with questions of policing and gender, and occupational culture more generally, while the theoretical framework developed will provide an important foundation for strategies of reform. At the same time the book provides a vivid and richly textured picture of the realities of operational policing in contemporary Britain.
- an innovative study of street policing and gender, exploring the way police attitudes and beliefs draw upon and perpetuate traditional conceptions of 'male' and 'female'
- derived from ethnographic research in the real world of street policing, the first of its kind to have been carried out with the British police, involving police responses to gangland shootings, high speed car chases, operational activities with the Mounted Branch as well as more routine police activities.
- a key contribution to the debate on police culture and highly topical in the light of plans for reform