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[ecrea] Call book chapter: New perspectives in post-transitional policing studies
Mon Dec 18 09:20:55 GMT 2017
Proposal Submission Link:
https://criticalpolicing.wordpress.com/
<https://criticalpolicing.wordpress.com/>
Call for Chapters:
New perspectives in post-transitional policing studies
Editors:
Prof. Dr. Kerezsi Klára DSc
Doctor of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Senior Advisor, National Institute of Criminology
National University of Public Service, Faculty of Law Enforcement
E-mail: (Kerezsi.Klara /at/ uni-nke.hu) <mailto:(Kerezsi.Klara /at/ uni-nke.hu)>
https://doktori.hu/index.php?menuid=191&di_ID=204&lang=EN
<https://doktori.hu/index.php?menuid=191&di_ID=204&lang=EN>
Dr. Veronika Nagy
Assistant Professor
Utrecht University
Willem Pompe Institute for Criminal Law and Criminology
Boothstraat 6 3512 BW Utrecht
<https://maps.google.com/?q=Boothstraat+6+3512+BW+Utrecht&entry=gmail&source=g>
(v.nagy /at/ uu.nl) <mailto:(v.nagy /at/ uu.nl)> | +31 30 253 7125
<tel:+31%2030%20253%207125> (secretariaat)
https://www.uu.nl/staff/VNagy
Proposals Submission Deadline: 30 December 2017
Full Chapters Due: 20 April 2018
Submission Date: 30 September 2018
Introduction
The social, economic and technological developments of the late
modern society have radically changed policing approaches both at
national and supranational levels. The anti-terrorism discourse has
placed the security needs of citizens at the pinnacle of government
priorities, but at the same time traditional law enforcement have
faced an epistemological crisis through the privatization of
security. On the one hand, governments, and especially the police,
are expected to either prevent or respond to security threats, and
if necessary, to ensure order through rigorous measures. On the
other hand, the traditional means of policing have increasing
difficulties to sustain their legitimacy both in the national and in
the supranational setting.
Regarding the subject of public security, five political and police
changes can be identified as a reaction to these new developments:
1. The changes in the relationship between organizational and
management rules between the state and other governing bodies,
2. The system of out-of-court measures,
3. The emphasis on a victim-centred approach,
4. The use of new technologies, and
5. The fusion of different security units, such as intelligence
services, the military, and the police.
These changes together with the existing security concerns indicate
new tensions in policing practices and urge the adaptation of new
theoretical approaches. Although several conceptual differentiations
are made between policing practices, hardly any theoretical studies
discuss the implication of contextual differences between
traditional welfare states and new democratic governments.
Therefore, the publication focuses on creating a critical
interdisciplinary approach through contextualised thematic analyses
of policing practices after the digital turn. All topics will be
discussed from a theoretical perspective, and will assess questions
of how digitalisation, ultra-state policing and privatisation have
changed traditional policing approaches. The editors will seek
chapters that address different aspects of policing in
post-transitional contexts such as the privatisation of policing
tasks, the changing power-relations between police, the state, and
society, communication between police institutions and militarised
policing practices in different countries.
While challenging existing theoretical approaches in Anglo-Saxon
policing studies, the book aims to promote critical law enforcement
studies and the need for new conceptual approaches.
Objective
This comprehensive, relevant and timely publication aims to be an
essential reference source, building on the available literature in
the field of security studies and law enforcement in public and
private policing approaches, while simultaneously providing a
critical conceptual framework for further research opportunities in
this dynamic field. The text shall serve as an essential basis in
academic education of policing scholars and other students, for
international and national security organizations and for academics
alike.
Target Audience
Advanced-level students, academics, researchers, international and
national organizations, and government officials will find this text
useful in furthering their research exposure to pertinent topics in
policing studies, social and cultural practices in police units, and
surveillance studies.
Recommended Topics
Contributors are welcome to submit abstracts on the following topics
related (but not limited) to policing theories:
• Historical changes in policing theories
• Policing research
• Investigative practice
• Policing ethnography
• Police diversity
• Policing theories
• Police socialisation and the police subculture
• Community-based policing
• Solidarity and the ‘Code of Silence’
• Professional development
• Police culture
• Policing protests
• Policing in transition
• Policing borders
• Policing and mental health
• Sensitive issues
• Surveillance
• Digital media and policing.
• Reflection of cultural values in police units
• Gender and police stress
• Sustainability and trust
• Use of force
• Interrelations of secret intelligence and state policing
• Public-private cooperation
• Guarding the guardians
• Digitalisation and policing
• The future of policing
Submission Procedure
Contributors are invited to submit by 30 December 2017, a proposal
of 1000 to 1,500 words clearly identifying the topic and structure
of the chapter. Proposals should be submitted through an email
((v.nagy /at/ uu.nl) <mailto:(v.nagy /at/ uu.nl)> ), and authors will be notified
of the status of their proposal not later than 30 January 2018. All
submitted chapters chosen for publication will be original, of high
quality, and approximately 10,000 words in length at the publication
stage. All submissions will be refereed through a double-blind
review process. Author(s) of the accepted proposal are required to
submit their full chapter no later than 20 April 2018 to facilitate
the review process. Submitted chapters should not have been
previously published nor be currently under review for publication
at other venues. Submissions should follow the manuscript format
guidelines from Bristol Policy press. All authors are encouraged to
visit the publishers site below before beginning the writing process:
http://policypress.co.uk/publish-with-us
<http://policypress.co.uk/publish-with-us>
Note: There are no submission or acceptance fees for manuscripts
submitted to this book publication. All manuscripts are accepted
based on a double-blind peer review editorial process. The book is
planned to be published at the end of 2018.
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