Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 International and comparative criminal justice and urban governance
- PART 1 International criminal justice
- PART 2 Comparative penal policies
- PART 3 Comparative crime control and urban governance
- 15 Victimhood of the national? Denationalising sovereignty in crime control
- 16 Cosmopolitan liberty in the age of terrorism
- 17 Restorative justice and states' uneasy relationship with their publics
- 18 Governing nodal governance: the ‘anchoring’ of local security networks
- 19 From the shopping mall to the street corner: dynamics of exclusion in the governance of public space
- 20 Gating as governance: the boundaries spectrum in social and situational crime prevention
- 21 French perspectives on threats to peace and local social order
- 22 The question of scale in urban criminology
- Index
- References
18 - Governing nodal governance: the ‘anchoring’ of local security networks
from PART 3 - Comparative crime control and urban governance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 International and comparative criminal justice and urban governance
- PART 1 International criminal justice
- PART 2 Comparative penal policies
- PART 3 Comparative crime control and urban governance
- 15 Victimhood of the national? Denationalising sovereignty in crime control
- 16 Cosmopolitan liberty in the age of terrorism
- 17 Restorative justice and states' uneasy relationship with their publics
- 18 Governing nodal governance: the ‘anchoring’ of local security networks
- 19 From the shopping mall to the street corner: dynamics of exclusion in the governance of public space
- 20 Gating as governance: the boundaries spectrum in social and situational crime prevention
- 21 French perspectives on threats to peace and local social order
- 22 The question of scale in urban criminology
- Index
- References
Summary
Shedding the structures of hierarchy may seen refreshing (in a normative, positive or symbolic sense), but constitutional authority (manifested in hierarchy) and the ‘fiscal spine’ of appropriated funds remain the structures within which relational and networked forms are enabled to flourish.
Hill and Lynn 2005: 189Introduction
The organisation of policing and, in a wider sense, security is undergoing considerable restructuration in Western societies (Crawford 1999; Hughes and Edwards 2002; Crawford et al. 2005; Jones and Newburn 2006; Wood and Dupont 2006; Fleming and Wood 2006; Henry and Smith 2007). A key development is that the government is losing its previously taken-for-granted dominance over crime and disorder control under pressure of ‘polycentric’ or ‘networked’ agents and agencies. Accordingly, at the local level, police forces and municipalities find themselves in a ‘multilateralised’ environment of both organisational auspices authorising security and policing and providers who supply executive personnel (Bayley and Shearing 2001). These auspices and providers do not necessarily overlap. It is, on the contrary, possible that a municipal authority (public) hires commercial security guards (private) to patrol the streets. Auspices and providers may have become separated. In this manner, the classical distinction between ‘the public’ and ‘the private’ has proved problematic (Jones and Newburn 1998; Kempa et al. 1999; Johnston 2000). Organisations have become part of ‘amorphous’ or ‘hybrid’ assemblages that feature different degrees of ‘publicness’ and ‘privateness’ (Dijkstra and van der Meer 2003).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- International and Comparative Criminal Justice and Urban GovernanceConvergence and Divergence in Global, National and Local Settings, pp. 461 - 482Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
References
- 8
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