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More than Law and Order
Policing a Changing Society 1945-1992
Susan Butterworth
Immediately after the Second World War, the New Zealand Police were
in a sorry state: short on resources, antiquated in their systems and
with too many elderly and infirm staff. The period covered by this
book saw major change and modernisation. The author explores the ways
in which the police have overhauled their management structure repeatedly
since the 1940s and shows how they have often struggled to position
themselves within the modern public sector. These issues lift the history
into the wider context of government and management in the second half
of the twentieth century.
There is much of interest to the general reader here - the 1951 waterfront
lockout, the Crewe murders, the police view of the Springbok Tour in
1981, the growing role of women in the force, the development of forensic
sciences and communications systems, the emergence of specialist squads,
the role of police in Search and Rescue - and the book often sheds
new light on recent history.
Contents
Introduction
1 Backs to the Future
2 Cloaks and Daggers, 1951-55
3 Throwing Open the Windows
4 A Steady Beat, 1958-68
5 The New System of Policing
6 A bobby's Job, 1968-81
7 Policing Order and Disorder, 1965-80
8 Sound and Fury: The 1981 Springbok
Tour
9 Cops and Bobbies
10 Defining the police, 1981-92
11 Treading Water in a Tidal Wave
About the Author
Susan Butterworth, a professional historian, is the author of several
books ranging from a history of Shetland Islanders to local histories,
and co-author of Reforming Education: The New Zealand Experience 1984-1996 (1998).
Publication details
hardback, ISBN 1 877276 99 5, 255 x 160 mm, 400 pp, $49.95
Full colour
illustrations
Release: September 2005
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