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100 _aAgee, Christopher Lowen
_956387
245 _aCrisis and Redemption:
_bHistory of American Police Reform since World War II/
260 _bSage,
_c2020.
300 _aVol 46, Issue 5, 2020 ( 951–960 p.).
520 _aThis introduction to the special section on police and cities surveys the repeated rounds of exposure, disruption, and redemption urban American police departments have undergone since World War II. Rather than telling the history of modern law enforcement as a story of uninterrupted growth, this article emphasizes the crises in police legitimacy that punctuated the postwar period. New citizenship models, new social practices, and new understandings of democratic governance repeatedly forced urban police to re-authorize their power. Moreover, these challenges to police legitimacy sparked and steered much of the postwar expansion of police power. As a result of these past crises, modern police now root their authority in a racialized harm principle and in the seemingly contradictory ideologies of police professionalization and community partnership. This introduction concludes with a discussion of the special section’s essays, highlighting how each contributor uses the police to expand our understanding of urban governance. Collectively, the essays explore the vast range of urban actors—including community activists, academics, black mayors, liberal police chiefs, and rank-and-file officers—who attempted to use disruptions in police authority to reshape postwar law enforcement. The essays also consider different types of cities—including deindustrializing metropolises, small cities, and cities in America’s territories—to help us more accurately identify national trends. Together, the essays in this special section make clear the central role urban police have played in the histories of American citizenship and democracy.
773 0 _09176
_916956
_dThousand Oaks Sage Publications
_tJournal of urban history
_x00961442
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0096144217705463
942 _2ddc
_cEJR
999 _c14037
_d14037