Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781469676593 Academic Inspection Copy

Gotham's War within a War

Policing and the Birth of Law-and-Order Liberalism in World War II-Era New York City
Description
Author
Biography
Reviews
Google
Preview
A surprising history unfolded in New Deal- and World War II-era New York City under Mayor Fiorello La Guardia. Throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, members of the NYPD had worked to enforce partisan political power rather than focus on crime. That changed when La Guardia took office in 1934 and shifted the city's priorities toward liberal reform. La Guardia's approach to low-level policing anticipated later trends in law enforcement, including "broken windows" theory and "stop and frisk" policy. Police officers worked to preserve urban order by controlling vice, including juvenile delinquency, prostitution, gambling, and the "disorderly" establishments that officials believed housed these activities. This mode of policing was central to La Guardia's influential vision of urban governance, but it was met with resistance from the Black New Yorkers, youth, and working-class women it primarily targeted. The mobilization for World War II introduced new opportunities for the NYPD to intensify policing and criminalize these groups with federal support. In the 1930s these communities were framed as perils to urban order; during the militarized war years, they became a supposed threat to national security itself. Brooks recasts the evolution of urban policing by revealing that the rise of law-and-order liberalism was inseparable from the surveillance, militarism, and nationalism of war.
Emily Brooks is a full-time curriculum writer at the New York Public Library's Center for Educators and Schools. She received her PhD in history from the Graduate Center at the City University in New York.
[Brooks] convincingly argues that although promoted as a means of ending police corruption and racial discrimination, the policy's guiding strategy--upholding public order by suppressing moral evils such as gambling, prostitution, juvenile delinquency, and disorderly entertainment--effectively criminalized certain identities . . . . the parallels to more recent and widespread examples of aggressive, racialized policing are clear."--CHOICE
Google Preview content