Annual Report - Los Angeles Police Department
Author : Los Angeles (Calif.). Police Department
Publisher :
Page : 74 pages
File Size : 32,9 MB
Release : 1912
Category : Los Angeles (Calif.)
ISBN :
Author : Los Angeles (Calif.). Police Department
Publisher :
Page : 74 pages
File Size : 32,9 MB
Release : 1912
Category : Los Angeles (Calif.)
ISBN :
Author : Los Angeles (Calif.). Police Department
Publisher :
Page : 172 pages
File Size : 23,74 MB
Release : 1946
Category : Police
ISBN :
Author : Los Angeles (Calif.). Police Dept
Publisher :
Page : 216 pages
File Size : 32,16 MB
Release : 1938
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Los Angeles (Calif.). Police Department
Publisher :
Page : 32 pages
File Size : 10,28 MB
Release : 2000
Category : Police
ISBN :
Author : Los Angeles (Calif.). Police Department
Publisher :
Page : 374 pages
File Size : 41,55 MB
Release : 1937
Category : Police
ISBN :
Author : Max Felker-Kantor
Publisher : UNC Press Books
Page : 393 pages
File Size : 25,74 MB
Release : 2018-09-25
Category : History
ISBN : 1469646846
When the Los Angeles neighborhood of Watts erupted in violent protest in August 1965, the uprising drew strength from decades of pent-up frustration with employment discrimination, residential segregation, and poverty. But the more immediate grievance was anger at the racist and abusive practices of the Los Angeles Police Department. Yet in the decades after Watts, the LAPD resisted all but the most limited demands for reform made by activists and residents of color, instead intensifying its power. In Policing Los Angeles, Max Felker-Kantor narrates the dynamic history of policing, anti–police abuse movements, race, and politics in Los Angeles from the 1965 Watts uprising to the 1992 Los Angeles rebellion. Using the explosions of two large-scale uprisings in Los Angeles as bookends, Felker-Kantor highlights the racism at the heart of the city's expansive police power through a range of previously unused and rare archival sources. His book is a gripping and timely account of the transformation in police power, the convergence of interests in support of law and order policies, and African American and Mexican American resistance to police violence after the Watts uprising.
Author : David B. Wolcott
Publisher : Ohio State University Press
Page : 276 pages
File Size : 17,19 MB
Release : 2005
Category : Law
ISBN : 0814210023
Juvenile courts were established in the early twentieth century with the ideal of saving young offenders from "delinquency." Many kids, however, never made it to juvenile court. Their cases were decided by a different agency--the police. Cops and Kids analyzes how police regulated juvenile behavior in turn-of-the-century America. Focusing on Los Angeles, Chicago, and Detroit, it examines how police saw their mission, how they dealt with public demands, and how they coped daily with kids. Whereas most scholarship in the field of delinquency has focused on progressive-era reformers who created a separate juvenile justice system, David B. Wolcott's study looks instead at the complicated, sometimes coercive, relationship between police officers and young offenders. Indeed, Wolcott argues, police officers used their authority in a variety of ways to influence boys' and girls' behavior. Prior to the creation of juvenile courts, police officers often disciplined kids by warning and releasing them, keeping them out of courts. Establishing separate juvenile courts, however, encouraged the police to cast a wider net, pulling more young offenders into the new system. While some departments embraced "child-friendly" approaches to policing, others clung to rough-and-tumble methods. By the 1920s and 1930s, many police departments developed new strategies that combined progressive initiatives with tougher law enforcement targeted specifically at growing minority populations. Cops and Kids illuminates conflicts between reformers and police over the practice of juvenile justice and sheds new light on the origins of lasting tensions between America's police and urban communities.
Author : United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary
Publisher :
Page : 702 pages
File Size : 45,7 MB
Release : 1963
Category : Administrative procedure
ISBN :
Author : Mary E. Odem
Publisher : Univ of North Carolina Press
Page : 285 pages
File Size : 36,15 MB
Release : 2000-11-09
Category : History
ISBN : 080786367X
Delinquent Daughters explores the gender, class, and racial tensions that fueled campaigns to control female sexuality in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century America. Mary Odem looks at these moral reform movements from a national perspective, but she also undertakes a detailed analysis of court records to explore the local enforcement of regulatory legislation in Alameda and Los Angeles Counties in California. From these legal proceedings emerge overlapping and often contradictory views of middle-class female reformers, court and law enforcement officials, working-class teenage girls, and working-class parents. Odem traces two distinct stages of moral reform. The first began in 1885 with the movement to raise the age of consent in statutory rape laws as a means of protecting young women from predatory men. By the turn of the century, however, reformers had come to view sexually active women not as victims but as delinquents, and they called for special police, juvenile courts, and reformatories to control wayward girls. Rejecting a simple hierarchical model of class control, Odem reveals a complex network of struggles and negotiations among reformers, officials, teenage girls and their families. She also addresses the paradoxical consequences of reform by demonstrating that the protective measures advocated by middle-class women often resulted in coercive and discriminatory policies toward working-class girls.
Author : Max Felker-Kantor
Publisher : UNC Press Books
Page : 187 pages
File Size : 20,5 MB
Release : 2024-02-14
Category : History
ISBN : 1469676370
With its signature "DARE to keep kids off drugs" slogan and iconic t-shirts, DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) was the most popular drug education program of the 1980s and 1990s. But behind the cultural phenomenon is the story of how DARE and other antidrug education programs brought the War on Drugs into schools and ensured that the velvet glove of antidrug education would be backed by the iron fist of rigorous policing and harsh sentencing. Max Felker-Kantor has assembled the first history of DARE, which began in Los Angeles in 1983 as a joint venture between the police department and the unified school district. By the mid-90s, it was taught in 75 percent of school districts across the United States. DARE received near-universal praise from parents, educators, police officers, and politicians and left an indelible stamp on many millennial memories. But the program had more nefarious ends, and Felker-Kantor complicates simplistic narratives of the War on Drugs. He shows how policing entered US schools and framed drug use as the result of personal responsibility, moral failure, and poor behavior deserving of punishment rather than something deeply rooted in state retrenchment, the abandonment of social service provisions, and structures of social and economic inequality.