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21 Liverpool L. Rev. 217 (1999)
The Postmodern Condition of the Police

handle is hein.journals/lvplr21 and id is 223 raw text is: EUGENE McLAUGHLIN and KARIM MURJI

THE POSTMODERN CONDITION OF THE POLICE
INTRODUCTION
Globalisation of economies and cultures, the advent of new information
and telecommunication technologies, unfolding Europeanisation, internal
multi-nationalisation, and the 'new individualism' means that the insti-
tutional configuration of the United Kingdom is in the process of rapid
transformation. Amongst criminologists, there is a heightened sense that
alongside radically different forms of risk, uncertainty and instability,
and the way they are perceived, an incisive re-ordering of the tech-
niques and logics of social control is taking place. As a result, at various
moments during the last decade, there has been a recognition of the urgent
need to rethink the assumptions and registers on which police studies,
as a sub-field of criminological knowledge, has been premised. For cer-
tain academic commentators, the surest way to get to grips with these
fin de siecle transformations is through utilisation of the general theory
of 'late modernity'. More recently, discussion has moved on to cross-
examining the relationship between policing and the risk society. Whilst
we acknowledge the important contribution of these lines of reasoning to
the theoretical revitalisation of police studies, the central aim of this article
is to argue that an important debate about the value of postmodern analysis
has been closed down too quickly. The first parts of this article discuss both
the attempts to conjoin the postmodern with policing and the trenchant
anti-postmodernist response. After providing readers with our own critical
assessment of these different perspectives, the final sections of the arti-
cle elaborate on the ways we think that certain of the ideas most closely
associated with postmodern cultural analysis provide an understanding of
contemporary transformations in British policing.
THE POSTMODERN AND POLICING
For the past decade the terms postmodern, postmodernism and post-
modernity have dominated many aspects of Western academic and cultural
rl Liverpool Law Review 21: 217-240, 1999.
!     2000 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands.

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