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Conquering the British Ballarat: the policing of Victorian Middlesbrough.


Abstract: David Taylor David Taylor or Dave Taylor can be one of several persons: Sports people
  • David Taylor (Australian cricketer), Australian cricketer
  • David Taylor (English cricketer), English cricketer
  • David Taylor (snooker player), snooker player
, "Conquering the British Ballarat: The Policing of Victorian Middlesbrough"

Over the period of the reign of Queen Victoria, Middlesbrough--the British Ballarat in Asa Briggs' memorable phrase--was transformed from a rough-and-ready 'frontier' town, with high crime rates and little in the way of policing, into a relatively stable and policed community, with appreciably ap·pre·cia·ble  
adj.
Possible to estimate, measure, or perceive: appreciable changes in temperature. See Synonyms at perceptible.
 lower levels of both serious and petty crimes. Crime rates were not reduced significantly until the last quarter of the century, under the Black Country (for example) were the transition came in the third quarter. The 1870s and 1880s were also critical decades in the creation of a stable police force in the town. The causal links between the emergence of a 'professional' police force and the reduction in crime rates is far from straightforward. Recent interpretations have played down the contribution of the police, seeing them more as beneficiaries of wider socio-economic changes. Without ignoring the impact of the diversification Diversification

A risk management technique that mixes a wide variety of investments within a portfolio. It is designed to minimize the impact of any one security on overall portfolio performance.

Notes:
Diversification is possibly the greatest way to reduce the risk.
 of the local economy, rising working-class living standards living standards nplnivel msg de vida

living standards living nplniveau m de vie

living standards living npl
 and the spread of respectability re·spect·a·bil·i·ty  
n.
The quality, state, or characteristic of being respectable.

Noun 1. respectability - honorableness by virtue of being respectable and having a good reputation
reputability
, it is argued that the town's police force (and in particular the rank-and-file men who were most in contact with the local population) played a major role in the conquering of the British Ballarat.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Journal of Social History
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Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Author Abstract
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Mar 22, 2004
Words:203
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Next Article:A "real boy" and not a sissy: gender, childhood, and masculinity, 1890-1940.
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