DC Public Library System

The men of Mobtown, policing Baltimore in the age of slavery and emancipation, Adam Malka

Label
The men of Mobtown, policing Baltimore in the age of slavery and emancipation, Adam Malka
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-320) and index
resource.governmentPublication
government publication of a state province territory dependency etc
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The men of Mobtown
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1002302798
Responsibility statement
Adam Malka
Series statement
Justice, Power, and Politics
Sub title
policing Baltimore in the age of slavery and emancipation
Summary
"The customary story of the rise of modern policing in America is rooted in the growth of northern cities. In this telling, professional police forces arose primarily in reaction to growing urban populations of immigrants and the poor. Meanwhile, scholars of the American South often argue that vigilantes and lynch mobs, as opposed to policemen and prisons, policed the region. Yet these two interrelated systems came to coexist in Baltimore. One system relied upon amateur and ordinary people - mostly white men - to guard the city, enforce its criminal laws, and govern in its name; the other, which emerged in the 1830s and 1840s, employed uniformed policemen to protect property rights and to build disciplinary asylums, reformatories, and prisons for those who infringed upon those rights. ... Adam Malka shows that for much of the nineteenth century these two systems worked in tandem as complementary state institutions designed to protect white men's property rights and power. He argues that the same assumptions of white male supremacy that sustained slavery also laid the foundations for the development of municipal policing and state punishment, resulting in a state-sanctioned form of brutality that prospered ... under the very conditions of freedom that African Americans fought so determinedly to secure"--, Provided by publisher
Classification
Genre
Content
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