List of Illustrations
Preface
1. Private Policing in the United States: The Diffusion of State
Power
2. Self-Defense and the "Armed Citizen"
3. Varieties of Vigilantism
4. Security Guards and Patrols
5. Private Detectives
6. Policing of Labor
7. Prisoners for Profit
8. What Should Be the Relationship between the State and Private
Police in American Society?
Select Bibliography
Index
Surveys private policing from 1850 to the present, arguing that private agencies have acted as an auxiliary of the state.
Wilbur R. Miller is Professor of History at Stony Brook University, USA.
A work of seminal and erudite scholarship, A History of Private
Policing in the United States is an extraordinary study that is
enhanced for academia with the inclusion of thirty-four pages of
Notes, a six page Selected Bibliography, and a fifteen page Index …
[Especially] and unreservedly recommended for college and
university library American Law Enforcement History collections and
supplemental studies reading lists.
*Midwest Book Review*
Bill Miller provides a valuable corrective to anyone who believes
that private policing and security emerged towards the end of the
20th century. This is a well-researched, well-argued and highly
readable book.
*Clive Emsley, Emeritus Professor, The Open University, UK*
A brilliant and original synthesis of the many strands of private
policing in American history. It is a gripping read which forges
unexpected and compelling connections between private forms of
self-help such as self-defense, bounty hunting, and vigilantism,
and parallel developments such as the advent of private detectives
and the use of private muscle to suppress the labor movement.
*Jacqueline E. Ross, Prentice H. Marshall Professor of Law,
University of Illinois, USA*
A major contribution to the history of private policing in the
United States. It delivers far more than its title suggests by
detailing the connections between a variety of policing bodies
including detective agencies, vigilantes, security guards, hired
strike-breakers, and many others. Miller’s comprehensive answer to
the conundrum of the Second Amendment stands out among many other
thought-provoking insights into the American plural policing
system.
*Dolores Janiewski, Associate Professor, Victoria University of
Wellington, New Zealand*
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