000 01172nam a2200193 a 4500
005 20160920120922.0
008 141201s2004 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9781843920649
040 _aMAIN
041 _aEnglish
082 _a363.2309421
_bWHI/UNH
100 _aWhitfield, James
245 _aUnhappy dialogue :
_bthe Metropolitan Police and black Londoners in post-war Britain
_cby James Whitfield.
260 _aU.K. :
_bWillan Pub.,
_c2004.
300 _a227 p.
500 _aTable of Contents: Chapter 1. Not quite what the government had in mind: West Indian Immigration in the 1950s 3. Chapter 2. The Police and British society in an era of affluence and decolonisation Chapter 3. . Only on our terms: the Met's unhappy dialogue with representative organisations Chapter 4. . The Home Secretary's overmighty subject - the Metropolitan Police Chapter 5. Recruitment problems, racial awareness training and becoming a real policeman Chapter 6. Negative stereotyping: the Met and the West Indian immigrant Chapter 7. Lack of Commitment, lessons that went unheeded and the dawn of a new era Index
650 _aPolice Services.
942 _cBK
999 _c9515
_d9515