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2017 EJPS 3 (2017)

handle is hein.journals/eupnjlo2017 and id is 1 raw text is: Aims and scope
The European Journal of Policing Studies is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes
articles addressing the topic of policing and police studies in the broad sense. EJPS
aims to provide insights into contemporary policing debates. It focuses on issues
that are of interest to the police and other policing actors, and that shape (the future
of) policing.
It offers contributions in a broad domain, including contemporary academic
(empirical) research on policing (by the police as well as other actors), phenomena
that may be of interest to policing actors, education, policing strategies and styles,
accountability and democratic rights, legal and political developments and policing
policy and practice.
With its primary aim of disclosing European research into, views on and analyses
of policing to the international community, EJPS wants to reach both policing
researchers and practitioners. In its ambition to help overcome the language barrier,
EJPS aims to disclose research from countries which often remain out of sight in
publications and also applauds international comparative research.
The Journal concentrates on contributions from European countries, but contribu-
tions from other countries are also welcomed, if they provide added value for the
European context. EJ PS aspires to have an international reach and the editors aim
for inclusion in the Thomson Reuters database (Web of Science). It is published
four times a year, aiming for a combination of mixed issues (dealing with several
topics, consisting of proactive submissions) and special issues (focused on a specific
theme and hosted by one or more guest editor(s)).
EJPS strives for quick but thorough review procedures through the expert guid-
ance of an international editorial board and invites authors to submit their articles
through the online web application.
Current Issue
This issue of the European Journal of Policing Studies is a special issue that values
the tradition, influence and significance of police and policing ethnographies.
The special issue aims at giving insights into empirical and theoretical issues
of contemporary police organisations and policing contexts. The editors Chaim
Demar&e (Vrije Universiteit Brussel), Jan Terpstra (Radboud Universiteit), Els
Enhus (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) and Sofie De Kimpe (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)
gathered highly relevant papers that deal with specific topics of doing ethnography
in police settings. The issue is composed of seven papers from an international
research community (mainly based in Belgium, but also in Argentina, the United
Kingdom and the Netherlands). We kindly refer to the editors' introduction for
more information on how this special issue was established and for more details
on each contribution (see title 4. 'Selected issues and themes in the special issue').
E     Maklu                                                                       3

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