
Taking Care of Business: Police Detectives, Drug Law Enforcement and Proactive Investigation offers a rich and insightful empirical study of drug investigations, based on extensive fieldwork undertaken with the specialist detective units of two English police services. It fills a significant gap in criminological literature by providing a timely and thought-provoking ethnography of detective culture, investigative practice, and drug law enforcement. Drawing on data collected from over five hundred hours of direct observation of ordinary police work, both on and off the streets, the chapters are skilfully interwoven with fieldnotes, informal conversations, interviews and analysis of official documents. Taken together, they explore how police officers perceive the drug world and their role in it, translate policy from its written form into action, and utilise intelligence-led policing strategies to instigate covert operations and make cases. There is in-depth examination of the everyday realities of the 'war on drugs,' alongside the associated working rules, tacit understandings and underlying assumptions that operate behind the public face of police organizations. The book also critically examines the most pertinent legislative initiatives, organizational reforms, and shifts in thinking concerning the values, objectives and norms of policing that have occurred over recent decades, which, between them, have contributed to significant changes in the ways that detectives are trained and investigations are controlled and carried out. With highly salient insights regarding operational policing and drug control policy in the current social, economic and political climate, Taking Care of Business is a compelling and important work on contemporary criminal investigation and the policing of drugs. It will be of interest to scholars of criminology, sociology, law, and policy studies, especially those researching and studying policing, regulation, surveillance, drug control policy.
This book investigates the operational realities, cultural norms, and investigative strategies of specialist detective units tasked with drug law enforcement in England. Matthew Bacon, a researcher in criminology, utilizes extensive ethnographic fieldwork to examine how police officers translate abstract drug policies into daily practice. By analyzing over five hundred hours of direct observation, the author provides a framework for understanding the gap between official organizational mandates and the tacit, on-the-ground realities of the 'war on drugs.'
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in criminology and sociology identify this work as a significant contribution to the ethnography of police culture and investigative practice. Experts frequently highlight the text for its detailed empirical approach to understanding the internal mechanics of drug law enforcement.
Page Count:
308
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191511218
ISBN-13:
9780191511219
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