Governance: the Police & Crime Commissioner and police
accountability in context;
The psephology of the November 2012 election: motive, means and
opportunity;
Is the law on my side?: relationships between the PCC and the chief
police officer team;
Partners, Colleagues, or rivals for oversight? The (PCC) art of
making friends and influencing people;
'Putting yourself about': PCCs, the media and the public;
The debate with no end: PCCs’ remit and the problems of
policing;
'I wonder if the game is worth the candle': PCCs, their `work-life
balance’ and their future.
Bryn Caless specialises in elite studies of policing and police accountability. He has written Policing at the Top, (2011) on chief police officers in England and Wales, and, with Steve Tong, a companion study of police leaders in Europe (2015). This is his third book for Policy Press.
After a varied career as a police officer, Jane Owens now lectures at Canterbury, Christ Church University. Her research interests include neighbourhood policing, police governance and 'private' policing.
"This book is the most extensive and in-depth empirical study of Police and Crime Commissioners conducted to date. It provides fascinating insight into how these new constitutional actors are flexibly interpreting and discretely adapting to their responsibilities for governing the police." Stuart Lister, University of Leeds "Caless and Owens provide a depth of narrative that is rich and reminiscent" - Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books "Caless and Owens are to be congratulated on this rich and incisive analysis of Police and Crime Commissioners - a ground-breaking account of great value to scholars of policing and governance alike." Michael Rowe, Northumbria University "This fascinating account gives a unique insight into what Commissioners and their Chief Constables were thinking, and what went on behind closed doors, in those early months of PCCs." Nick Alston, PCC for Essex & Chair of the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners
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