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Policing the peace in Northern Ireland

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This book examines the way in which the issue of crime, and the response of the authorities to it, became central to the peace process in Northern Ieland after 1998.
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  • 01 April 2008
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This timely and controversial book shows how crime, and the authorities' response to crime, became central to the peace process in Northern Ireland.
At times, paramilitary activity threatened to destabilise the peace in Northern Ireland after 1998, but crime was central to maintaining capacity should the groups return to war. Over time, the reduction of crime was central to these groups’ own attempts to reform and official judgements as to whether they were genuinely demobilising.
The state’s response to crime added controversy. Police reform produced the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) and the new Organised Crime Task Force signalled the importance of crime control, but the Assets Recovery Agency, supposedly the ‘magic bullet’ for organised crime, misfired. Law enforcement was also deeply affected by the British state’s response to paramilitary crime. By 2007, peace was apparently secure and paramilitaries were ‘de-criminalising’, but this often chaotic process was marked with questions about the British state’s adherence to the rule of law.

Incorporating first-hand research in the PSNI, the book will be of interest to general readers and scholars of Irish Studies, criminology, and British and comparative politics.

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Price: £80.00
Pages: 256
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 01 April 2008
ISBN: 9780719074714
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Comparative Politics, Politics and government, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Criminology, Comparative politics, Crime and criminology

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List of tables
Abbreviations
Glossary
Preface/acknowledgements
1. Politics, policing and crime as an issue in Northern Ireland after the peace process
2. The republican movement: politics, crime and transition
3. Loyalist paramilitaries: violence, crime and legitimacy
4. ‘Ordinary decent’ organised and volume crime
5. From RUC to PSNI. Police reform and modernisation
6. Policing serious and volume crime
7. Political policing? The Organised Crime Task Force and the Assets Recovery Agency
8. Counter terrorist policing
9. Conclusion
Bibliography
Interviews
Index