Matthew Guariglia traces the history the New York City Police Department between the 1840s and 1930s to show how race, immigration, and empire informed and explicitly shaped policing in New York.
Matthew Guariglia traces the history the New York City Police Department between the 1840s and 1930s to show how race, immigration, and empire informed and explicitly shaped policing in New York.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
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Autorenporträt
Matthew Guariglia
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction. Race, Legibility and Policing in the Unequal City 1. Becoming Blue: New York Police’s Earliest Encounters with Race and Ethnicity, 1845–1871 24 2. Racial Heirarchies of Crime and Policing: Bodies, Morals, and Gender in the NYPD, 1890–1897 44 3. Colonial Methods: Francis Vinton Greene’s Journey from Empire to Policing the Empire City 71 4. The Rise of Ethnic Policing: Warren Charles, Cornelius Willemse, and the German Squad 93 5. Policing the “Italian Problem”: Criminality, Racial Difference, and the NYPD Italian Squad, 1903–1909 107 6. “They Needed Me as Much as I Needed Them”: Black Patrolmen and Resistance to Police Brutality, 1900–1913 135 7. “Police are Raw Materials”: Training Bodies in the World War I Era 153 8. Global Knowledge/American Police: Information, International Collaboration, and the Rise of Technocratice “Color-Blind” Policing 176 Conclusion. Policing’s Small Toolbox and the Afterlives of Ethnic Policing 199 Acknowledgments 207 Notes 211 Bibliography 235 Index
Introduction. Race, Legibility and Policing in the Unequal City 1. Becoming Blue: New York Police’s Earliest Encounters with Race and Ethnicity, 1845–1871 24 2. Racial Heirarchies of Crime and Policing: Bodies, Morals, and Gender in the NYPD, 1890–1897 44 3. Colonial Methods: Francis Vinton Greene’s Journey from Empire to Policing the Empire City 71 4. The Rise of Ethnic Policing: Warren Charles, Cornelius Willemse, and the German Squad 93 5. Policing the “Italian Problem”: Criminality, Racial Difference, and the NYPD Italian Squad, 1903–1909 107 6. “They Needed Me as Much as I Needed Them”: Black Patrolmen and Resistance to Police Brutality, 1900–1913 135 7. “Police are Raw Materials”: Training Bodies in the World War I Era 153 8. Global Knowledge/American Police: Information, International Collaboration, and the Rise of Technocratice “Color-Blind” Policing 176 Conclusion. Policing’s Small Toolbox and the Afterlives of Ethnic Policing 199 Acknowledgments 207 Notes 211 Bibliography 235 Index
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