This thesis assesses the influence of The Home Office, Her Majesty's Inspectorate of
Constabulaiy, the Association of Chief Police Officers, the Audit Commission, the Local
Police Authority, and the Chief Constable on local policy makers and impleinenters within
the Devon & Cornwall Constabiilary. It is based on five policy areas: the structmre of the
organisation. The Citizens' Charter, Annual Policing (now Performance) Plans, Domestic
Violence Policy, and Equal Opportunities Policy.
Unlike previous research, it brings together the issues of policy and practice at all levels of
the organisation through interviews with senior managers in the Devon & Cornwall
Constabulary and members of the Local Police Authority, and questionnaires to front line
police officers; as well as analysis of Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary reports
and Police Authority Policing Plans, and recomniendations made in Home Office Circulars
and Audit Commission reports.
The research was carried out prior to the infroduction of Crime and Disorder Partnerships
and Crime Audits, required by the Crime and Disorder Act 1998.
Both policy makers and policy implementers believed that there was a sfrong influence
from all the key players in the policy areas examined, with the exception of the Association.of Chief Police Officers arid the Local Police Authority: There is-no'^yidence;
to suggest that there has been any change in the power relationship between the Chief
Constable and the Police Authority.
For police officers directly iiivolved in the implementation process. The Citizens' Charter
and Annual Policing (now Performance) Plans had made little differerice to the way they
carried out their day-to-day work. In these more generic policy areas they saw less
influence from the key players but perceived greater influence coming from consumers,
public opinion, colleagues and immediate supervisors. In the tighter policy area of
domestic violence, where there is greater top down confrol, the mfluence of the key
players was the sfrongest, and local autonomy, both in policy and practice was hard to find.
The police organisatiori retains many of the attiibutes of a classical bureaucracy and an ideal form of organisational stincture has yet to be found.
Date of Award | 2002 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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CONTROLLING THE POLICE: LOCAL AUTONOMY IN POLICY AND PRACTICE
APPLEGATE, R. J. (Author). 2002
Student thesis: PhD