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Full Description
This title was first published in 2002. The Making of a Policeman traces the process of consolidation of the Metropolitan Police of London from the establishment of the force in 1829 to the First World War. Not only was this the largest force in the country, policing the biggest city in Europe and the hub of an expanding empire, it was also one of the largest work organisations of any kind. It is from this new perspective of the history of work, that this book analyses the Metropolitan Police as a labour force. It provides a unique view of an institution that had a profound impact on numerous areas of British life. The Metropolitan Police represented a distinct pattern of employment within the changing world of work in Victorian and Edwardian Britain. Adopting long-term strategies for the recruitment of workers and their conditions of service, the force was a precursor for many future employment policies.
Contents
Contentsmotives and formal selection criteria; Informal selection preferences and the response of labour: augmenting the portrait; Job stability vs. mobility: rounding out the portrait; Control and Accommodation: Socialization, bureaucracy and everyday life in the force; The paternalist contract: labour-management reciprocity; Patterns of promotion; Recreation and control; Conflict and negotiation: industrial relations without unionization; Bibliography; Index.