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Commercial Risk, Political Violence and Policing the City of London (From Crime and Insecurity: The Governance of Safety in Europe, P 234-259, 2002, Adam Crawford, ed. -- See NCJ-197556)

NCJ Number
197565
Author(s)
Clive Walker; Martina McGuinness
Date Published
2002
Length
26 pages
Annotation
This chapter discusses the policing of terrorism and political violence in London (England), with attention to the IRA's bombings in London in 1992 and 1993, along with the London Docklands and Manchester bombings in 1996, in terms of the legislative attempts to shore up confidence in the London reinsurance market.
Abstract
The chapter proceeds by describing the IRA bombings as case studies, with an attempt to explain why commercial targets were selected during this period and the strategies involved. The most direct response of the British Government pertained to the issue of insurance, which was at once both a local and global issue. This chapter details the complex legislative response, followed by a commentary on how the strategy meshed with wider political and social considerations; how it worked in practice; and how further strategies, both political and policing, affected the outcome. Some consideration is given to the extent to which the individual, whether human or corporate, can demand a state response to insecurity, especially through invoking a claim to right. The authors observe that the nation-state cannot tolerate unaccountable expansions of responsibilities for security, and so it is the private sector, either commercially or individually, that becomes the increasingly important bearer of risk. In this way, there is a postmodern twist to the duties of public protection by the state, in that the recent era of terrorist bombings has also encouraged parallel private duties of protection, with a consequent development of private policing alongside public policing. 58 references