内容説明
This timely volume provides a critical analysis of the most comprehensive and least comprehended of state powers, the power to police, broadly understood as the power to maximize public welfare-or, more colorfully, its "peace, order, and good government."
Featuring contributions by leading scholars from several countries working in a variety of fields, including law, criminology, political science, history, sociology, and social theory, The New Police Science examines the power to police as a basic technology of modern government that appears in a vast array of sites of governance, including not only the state, but also the household, the factory, the military, and-most recently-the global realm of war, police actions, and peacekeeping. This volume resurrects and radically re-envisions the once thriving study of police science as a comprehensive critical inquiry into the nature of governance.
目次
Contents Contributors iii Introduction Markus Dirk Dubber & Mariana Valverde, Perspectives on the Power and Science of Police 1 Chapter 1 Mark Neocleous, Theoretical Foundations of the "New Police Science" 000 Chapter 2 Pasquale Pasquino, Spiritual Police and Earthly Police: Theories of the State in Early Modern Europe 000 Chapter 3 Mariana Valverde, "Peace, Order, and Good Government": Police-Like Powers in Postcolonial Perspective 000 Chapter 4 Markus Dirk Dubber, The New Police Science and the Police Power Model of the Criminal Process 000 Chapter 5 Lindsay Farmer, The Jurisprudence of Security: The Police Power and the Criminal Law 000 Chapter 6 Alan Hunt, Police and the Regulation of Traffic: Policing as Civilizing Process 000 Chapter 7 Mitchell Dean, Military Intervention as "Police" Action? 000 Chapter 8 Ron Levi & John Hagan, International Police 000 Conclusion Christopher Tomlins, Framing the Fragments. Police: Genealogies, Discourses, Locales, Principles 000 Index 000
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