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New Improved Monied Police: Reform, Crime Control, and the Commodification of Policing in London

NCJ Number
160850
Journal
British Journal of Criminology Volume: 36 Issue: 1 Dated: (Winter 1996) Pages: 85-108
Author(s)
J L McMullan
Date Published
1996
Length
24 pages
Annotation
This article examines the reform agenda associated with the "new improved monied police" in London in the later 18th century.
Abstract
Although the history of monied policing in London extends back to the world of the 16th century informer, spy, and thief- taker and includes entrepreneurs such as Mary Frith and Jonathan Wild, this article focuses on monied policing in the mid-18th century. It begins by examining the political economy of monied policing, showing how money and law came to define the nature of police work in the metropolis. Next, the author analyses the reform initiatives of Henry Fielding, Saunders Welch, and Sir John Fielding. The article addresses two related questions: Did their policing reforms contribute to the commodification of policing services in and around the city? How successful were the "new improved monied police" in creating a new criminal investigation and surveillance apparatus for London? The article concludes by examining the aftermath of reform on commercial policing. Topics considered are the roles of buyers and sellers in the policing market-place change, who had market dominance, who had administrative control, and the social implications of monied policing for security and protection in the metropolis. 78 references

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