The rise of modern police and the European state system from Metternich to the Second World War / Hsi-huey Liang.
1992
HV8194.A2 L53 1992 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
The rise of modern police and the European state system from Metternich to the Second World War / Hsi-huey Liang.
Published
Cambridge, [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1992.
Call Number
HV8194.A2 L53 1992
ISBN
0521430224
Description
xiii, 345 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)26012350
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Abbreviations used in footnotes
Preface
Introduction: How do we define modern police?
1
Definitions in police literature
1
The time of modern police: A historian's definition
3
Police terminology
10
Police methods
14
1
Five national police styles in response to popular unrest in the nineteenth century
18
The Austrian police: The Metternich system and its decline after 1848
18
The Swiss police: A public service to Europe?
34
The French police: Defense du territoire, the key to controlled change
42
The police in Germany. Prussia and the idea of "Burgfrieden"
62
The Russian police and Europe
76
2
Modern police and the conduct of foreign policy. The French police and the recovery of France after 1871
83
Foreign responses to the French debacle and the Paris Commune
83
The French police and the recovery of France
89
Bismarck's anti-Socialist law and German police activities in Switzerland, 1878-90
104
Franco-Russian police relations, 1872-81
112
The breakdown in German-Swiss collaboration against the SPD
134
Gambetta, Boulanger, Schnaebele and the Franco-Russian alliance
140
3
International police collaboration from the 1870s to 1914. Professional contacts between police administrations
151
The Monaco Conference, 1914
153
International collaboration in political police work: The Rome Conference, 1898
155
The International Peace Conference at The Hague, 1899
169
Plans for a reactionary police league, 1901-4
171
The European response to the Russian revolution of 1905
174
4
War and revolution, 1914-1922
182
The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo, 1914
182
The outbreak of the First World War
189
Revolutions
213
A concluding remark
236
5
The threat of totalitarianism. Nazi Germany's bid for European hegemony
237
The prospects of democratization and international police collaboration after the war
237
The Nazi dictatorship
244
The fall of the Sudetenland and the failure of collective police security
266
The beginning of the Second World War
290
Epilogue
309
List of archival files consulted
325
Index
335