Oakensen, D. (2015). Antipathy to ambivalence: Politics and women police in Sussex, 1915–45. Sussex Archaeological Collections 153. Vol 153, Sussex Archaeological Society. pp. 171-189. https://doi.org/10.5284/1086485. Cite this via datacite
Title The title of the publication or report |
Antipathy to ambivalence: Politics and women police in Sussex, 1915–45 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Issue The name of the volume or issue |
Sussex Archaeological Collections 153 | ||
Series The series the publication or report is included in |
Sussex Archaeological Collections | ||
Volume Volume number and part |
153 | ||
Page Start/End The start and end page numbers. |
171 - 189 | ||
Downloads Any files associated with the publication or report that can be downloaded from the ADS |
|
||
Licence Type ADS, CC-BY 4.0 or CC-BY 4.0 NC. |
ADS Terms of Use and Access
|
||
DOI The DOI (digital object identifier) for the publication or report. |
|
||
Publication Type The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book |
Journal | ||
Abstract The abstract describing the content of the publication or report |
The genesis of women's entry into policing can be found in social changes generated by the First World War and by the pre-war women's suffrage movement. But acceptance and integration were entirely different matters. Quite apart from any fear of proponents' political motivation, the idea that women should be allowed to patrol the streets represented a fundamental challenge to long-standing orthodoxies. Real decision-making power lay, in any case, with antipathetic police authorities and chief constables of the six forces in the county rather than with central government; and lobbying, however well-organised, could take years to precipitate change. What emerged were six distinct approaches which changed with time over the following 30 years. But, in most of Sussex, decision-makers remained ambivalent: the notion that women could be constables and a permanent feature of policing structures was not to be finally settled until well after 1945. | ||
Year of Publication The year the book, article or report was published |
2015 | ||
Source Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in. |
ADS Archive
(ADS Archive)
|
||
Relations Other resources which are relevant to this publication or report |
|
||
Created Date The date the record of the pubication was first entered |
11 Jul 2017 |