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Policing Women: The Sexual Politics of Law Enforcement and the LAPD.


Policing Women: The Sexual Politics of Law Enforcement and the LAPD 1. LAPD - Link Access Procedure on the D channel.
2. LAPD - Los Angeles Police Department.
. By Janis Appier (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1998. x plus 227pp. $59.95/cloth $19.95/paperback).

Policewomen are a much neglected group in the history of law enforcement. With rare exceptions, the historiography historiography

Writing of history, especially that based on the critical examination of sources and the synthesis of chosen particulars from those sources into a narrative that will stand the test of critical methods.
 of policing focuses on such issues as the administration of departments, corruption and efforts at reform, and twentieth-century efforts to professionalize pro·fes·sion·al·ize  
tr.v. pro·fes·sion·al·ized, pro·fes·sion·al·iz·ing, pro·fes·sion·al·iz·es
To make professional.



pro·fes
 the police. Very little has been done on actual police work, and that has dealt exclusively with policemen.

Dr. Appier's new book is therefore a welcome addition to this literature. Focusing on female pioneers, during the years from 1910 to 1940, Appier's first concern is to examine their "ideas, working lives, and problems" (p.1) as they attempted to create a place in law enforcement for women. Basing her discussion on the experiences of these women in the Los Angeles Police Department "LAPD" and "L.A.P.D." redirect here. For other uses, see LAPD (disambiguation).

This article or section is written like an .
, Appier ably analyzes their attitudes, problems, and accomplishments. Not surprisingly, she traces the interest among women in police work to the progressive movement in which women played so prominent a role. The first female officers approached policing as an extension of social work, especially among women and children, which was so characteristic of early twentieth century reform. Eschewing any interest in patrol duties, these pioneers struggled to create specialized programs within the LAPD which would shield adolescents (especially young women) from the rigors of an insensitive criminal justice system. As firm believers in th e theory that the environment provoked criminal behavior, these pioneers agitated ag·i·tate  
v. ag·i·tat·ed, ag·i·tat·ing, ag·i·tates

v.tr.
1. To cause to move with violence or sudden force.

2.
 for programs which would intervene in the lives of young people before they became hardened criminals.

These female officers followed the general, if ironic, trend which characterized other essentially conservative social agendas in the progressive era. Driven by the very best intentions, they sought to deploy the power of the state in the pursuit of their goals. Female officers needed the state to give them the opportunity to intervene in their charges' private lives. Los Angeles' City Mother's Bureau, founded in 1914, symbolically and practically exemplified this belief in the necessity for state sanctioned authority to implement their program. Once in their protective custody An arrangement whereby a person is safeguarded by law enforcement authorities in a location other than the person's home because his or her safety is seriously threatened. , youthful offenders youthful offenders n. under-age people accused of crimes, who are processed through a juvenile court and juvenile detention or prison facilities. In most states a youthful offender is under the age of 18.  were shielded from the consequences of their indiscretions and counseled to mend their ways.

Dr. Appier is very adept at analyzing the motives, successes, and problems which these first police women encountered. She is also quite perceptive per·cep·tive
adj.
1. Of or relating to perception.

2. Having the ability to perceive.

3. Keenly discerning.



per
 about the reasons for the eventual failure of these pioneers to transmit their values and programs to the second generation of female officers who began to enter police departments in the thirties. By that point the progressive impulse had weakened considerably, and the first generation of policewomen no longer had the political support which had been crucial to their efforts to join departments twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
 previously. Furthermore, the women's movement women's movement: see feminism; woman suffrage.
women's movement

Diverse social movement, largely based in the U.S., seeking equal rights and opportunities for women in their economic activities, personal lives, and politics.
 during the twenties abandoned its gender specific focus in favor of an argument for the equality of the sexes in the work force. As a result, the second generation of policewomen, which apparently was raised in the new approach to gender relations, rejected the social work model of their predecessors in favor of patrol work, with all that implied for the adoption of male-dominated definitions of appropriate police behavior.

Having rescued these pioneers from obscurity, Appier quite naturally attempts to define the significance of their work in the larger context of policing. She argues that these pioneers had a "profound impact on the development of twentieth-century police methods, functions, and subculture subculture /sub·cul·ture/ (sub´kul-chur) a culture of bacteria derived from another culture.

sub·cul·ture
n.
." (p.1) In support of her claim, Appier asserts that these women developed a "new, female gendered model of police work, the crime prevention model." (p.3)

Dr. Appier might better have claimed that these women officers developed a crime prevention model, rather than the crime prevention model. While she amply demonstrates that women approached policing from a different perspective from men by the early twentieth century, there is considerable doubt that these reformers invented the concept of crime prevention. That idea originated with the English, particularly with Patrick Colquhoun Patrick Colquhoun (14 March 1745-25 April 1820) was a merchant, statistician, magistrate, and founder of the first regular preventive police force in England, the Thames River Police. , and was the basis for the initial efforts at creating "modern" police forces in the first half of the nineteenth century in England and in America. Appier seems not to know the relevant historiography on this point, which is unfortunate because it creates confusion about her claims to women reformers' unique contributions to twentieth century policing.

Those claims are also not substantiated by her discussion; indeed some of her evidence contradicts her assertion. Appier demonstrates that the pioneers seriously undermined any possibility of influencing the long term evolution of policing models by deliberately and successfully isolating themselves from the departments in which they served. They worked very hard to create separate institutions, such as the City Mother's Bureau, within the police, essentially severing sev·er  
v. sev·ered, sev·er·ing, sev·ers

v.tr.
1. To set or keep apart; divide or separate.

2. To cut off (a part) from a whole.

3.
 themselves from the culture which Appier criticizes for its male dominated ethos. It is difficult to understand how the social work model for policing could affect a single department, even less a majority of them, when its purported advocates marginalized themselves so effectively. Furthermore, as she illustrates so well, the second generation of women police officers rejected the heritage of the pioneers. In the absence of any sustained interest in the social work model among subsequent generations of police women, Appier's assertion for its pervasive influence is unconvincing un·con·vinc·ing  
adj.
Not convincing: gave an unconvincing excuse.



un
.

Despite these problems, Appier has succeeded in rescuing the first generation of police women from undeserved un·de·served  
adj.
Not merited; unjustifiable or unfair.



unde·serv
 obscurity. This is a well-written and informative study which should encourage others to examine with equal care the role of women in policing in other cities and in other time periods.
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Title Annotation:Review
Author:Johnson, David R.
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Jun 22, 2000
Words:925
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