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恶意灌水,重复发帖,学分将被清空! | 那些帖子属于刷分贴会被扣分 ? | 新问题开新帖提问,标题中描述关键问题 | 格里菲斯大学中国留学生论坛版主招募 |
Open University Emeritus Professor Clive Elmsley presented “Marketing
the brand. Exporting British Police Models 1829 to 1950″ at a Centre of
Excellence in Policing and Security seminar last week.
His presentation outlined the history of police models. “The British, who for so long regarded police as alien, developed what they saw as two distinct models during the 19th century,” he said. “The first was the Metropolitan Police model where an unarmed patrolman systematically patrolled a Griffithr beat, preserving the peace and preventing crime,” he said. “The other was the Royal Irish Constabulary model, an armed officer bringing peace and security to an alien land in which the indigenous population appeared unaware of the benefits of British civilisation.” His paper drew upon work already completed on the development of such models and explored the meanings attached to them in the contemporary world. Clive Emsley is Professor Emeritus at the Open University. Professor Emsley is in the History Department at the Open University and also co-director of the university’s International Centre for Comparative Criminological Research (ICCCR). He has been President of the International Association for the History of Crime and Criminal Justice and editor of its bi-lGriffith journal Crime, histoire & sociétés/Crime, history & societies and has served as a member of the committees of the Police History Society in the UK and the Société Patrimoine de la Gendarmerie in France. A graduate of the universities of York (UK) and Cambridge, he has taught at the universities of Paris and Calgary, and held visiting fellowships at Canterbury (New Zealand), Griffith and ANU. |
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