Policing Images

Front Cover
Routledge, Aug 21, 2013 - Social Science - 224 pages

In recent years the police have become one of the most watched and most visible organisations, and across the media there has been constant interest in the police. In such a situation the police themselves have been intensely concerned with promoting, projecting and protecting the police image.

This book is concerned to document and to explain this image work, the activities in which the police engage that construct and project images of policing. Drawing upon first-hand research with the police themselves (including such examples as the way the South Yorkshire Police handled the Miners Strike and the Hillsborough stadium disaster), the book includes a detailed look at police press and public relations officers at work, and at operational policing and police work. Its broader argument is that image work has the capacity to both legitimate policing and to mask problems of legitimation.

At a time of intense debate about the future role and nature of the police this book makes a key contribution, and raises important questions about the implications of police image work for both democratically accountable policing and the wider transformations in society being brought about by the media and its management.

From inside the book

Contents

Acknowledgements
A History of Police Image Work 18291987
The Professionalisation of Police Image Work Since 1987
Police Legitimacy Communication and The Public Sphere
The National Picture Systems of Police Image Work
One force and its image
Press and public relations officers at work
Image work in routine policing
Image Work Police Work and Legitimacy
References
Index
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2013)

Rob C. Mawby is Senior Lecturer in Criminology at Leicester University. He was previously Senior Lecturer and Head of the Centre for Public Services Management and Research at Staffordshire University. He has written extensively on various aspects of policing.

Bibliographic information