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Policing Islam The British Occupation of Egypt and the Anglo-Egyptian Struggle over Control of the Police, 1882-1914
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Book Code: GM0714
ISBN: 0-313-30714-8
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-30714-0
216 pages, maps, photos
Greenwood Press
Publication: 11/30/1999
List Price: $115.00 (UK Sterling Price: £65.00)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: Contributions in Comparative Colonial Studies
Series Number: 38
Reviews:
  • ...this book is highly recommended to students of comparative criminal justice and those interested in the literature of police administration in Islamic societies during the height of the British Empire in the Near East and North Africa.
    —International Criminal Justice Review
    Vol. 12 2002
Description: The role of the police force was central in the politics and social life of Egypt during the British occupation between 1882 and 1914. Egyptians initially resisted British encroachment into the sphere of autonomy that had been reserved to them in police matters. However, preferring indirect rule to overt manifestations of power that would be signified by the use of the army, the British used the issue of reform to tighten their hold on Egypt by means of the police. This study applies modern criminological theory to examine the attendant political repression, torture, corruption, and rising crime that soon followed. Instead of the more professional and community-oriented police force exemplified by the bobbies in England, the British opted for a militarized Egyptian police force, better suited to the repression of political dissent than of ordinary crime. Tollefson seeks to account for rising crime in Egypt, which Lord Cromer, the British Consul-General between 1883 and 1907, referred to as Egypt's worst problem during his tenure. Under British control, defects in the police such as low pay, harsh discipline, and maltreatment of suspects persisted, and ordinary crime increased. This work confirms what students of colonial policing have come to appreciate; the police performed key security and social maintenance roles in colonial and quasi-colonial situations.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • The British Occupation and Police Reforms, 1882-1884
  • Partial Turkification, Decentralization, and Retrogression in the Egyptian Police, 1884-1889
  • Indianization and the Egyptian Police and Ghaffirs, 1889-1892
  • The British Takeover of the Ministry of the Interior and the Triumph of Liberal Imperialism, 1892-1896
  • Brief Heyday and Decline of the Police Reorganization, 1896-1907
  • Liberalization and Repression under Gorst, 1907-1911
  • The Police and Ghaffirs as Objects and Agents of the Consolidation of British Rule in Egypt under Kitchener, 1911-1914
  • Conclusion
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
LC Card Number: 98-44254
LCC Class: HV8269
Dewey Class: 363
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