9780367182915_oachapter3.pdf

This article describes the police intelligence division-of-labour. It is argued that police organisation gains overall coherence in relation to the ‘police métier’; a rationale that allows protagonists in the police world to make sense of an irrational workplace structure where personal loyalty,...

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Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Taylor & Francis 2019
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-250862021-11-10T07:53:45Z Chapter 3 The police intelligence division-of-labour Sheptycki, James police intelligence division of labour bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JP Politics & government This article describes the police intelligence division-of-labour. It is argued that police organisation gains overall coherence in relation to the ‘police métier’; a rationale that allows protagonists in the police world to make sense of an irrational workplace structure where personal loyalty, trust and honour (not formal organisational logic) form the basis of action and compliance. The concept of the police métier is defined in terms of the police professional concern with the mastery of surveillance and coercion in the reproduction of order, the making of crime and the governance of insecurity, and it is the polestar of the police mindset. The article describes the police intelligence division-of-labour paying specific attention to four different aspects of intelligence activity: the acquisition of intelligence or information; the analysis of information in the production of intelligence; tasking and co-ordination on the basis of intelligence ‘product’; or being tasked on that same basis. The descriptive analysis presented here is useful in several respects. Firstly it provides a basis for the comparative study of police intelligence work and its configuration within broader processes of security governance. Secondly, it provides a prototypical organisational map useful understanding the orientation of particular units – the organisational elements of policework (e.g. of drug squads, primary response, public order and homicide investigation units) – within the broader police division-of-labour. Lastly, it provides a complex view of issues concerning democratic governance of ‘the police’ as they are configured as nodes within broader networks of security governance. 2019-10-17 13:50:25 2020-04-01T10:21:33Z 2020-04-01T10:21:33Z 2019 chapter 1005008 OCN: 1135845302 9780429060687 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/25086 eng application/pdf n/a 9780367182915_oachapter3.pdf Taylor & Francis Policing Across Organisational Boundaries Routledge 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb b4d60267-d1c7-482d-b54b-fd53c00c5247 9780429060687 Routledge 17 open access
institution OAPEN
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language English
description This article describes the police intelligence division-of-labour. It is argued that police organisation gains overall coherence in relation to the ‘police métier’; a rationale that allows protagonists in the police world to make sense of an irrational workplace structure where personal loyalty, trust and honour (not formal organisational logic) form the basis of action and compliance. The concept of the police métier is defined in terms of the police professional concern with the mastery of surveillance and coercion in the reproduction of order, the making of crime and the governance of insecurity, and it is the polestar of the police mindset. The article describes the police intelligence division-of-labour paying specific attention to four different aspects of intelligence activity: the acquisition of intelligence or information; the analysis of information in the production of intelligence; tasking and co-ordination on the basis of intelligence ‘product’; or being tasked on that same basis. The descriptive analysis presented here is useful in several respects. Firstly it provides a basis for the comparative study of police intelligence work and its configuration within broader processes of security governance. Secondly, it provides a prototypical organisational map useful understanding the orientation of particular units – the organisational elements of policework (e.g. of drug squads, primary response, public order and homicide investigation units) – within the broader police division-of-labour. Lastly, it provides a complex view of issues concerning democratic governance of ‘the police’ as they are configured as nodes within broader networks of security governance.
title 9780367182915_oachapter3.pdf
spellingShingle 9780367182915_oachapter3.pdf
title_short 9780367182915_oachapter3.pdf
title_full 9780367182915_oachapter3.pdf
title_fullStr 9780367182915_oachapter3.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 9780367182915_oachapter3.pdf
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publisher Taylor & Francis
publishDate 2019
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