
@article{ref1,
title="Security governance in transition",
journal="Theoretical criminology",
year="2010",
author="Ellison, G. and O'Rawe, M",
volume="14",
number="1",
pages="31-57",
abstract="The article suggests that while the report of the Independent Commission on Policing (ICP) provides a police reform blueprint for Northern Ireland and elsewhere, it can also be seen as an attempt to engage more elliptically with contemporary debates in security governance vis-a-vis the increasingly fragmented nature of late-modern policing and the role of the state. A decade into the reform process in Northern Ireland and in spite of the networked approach postulated by the ICP, the public police continue to enjoy a pre-eminent place and little evidence exists of any significant weakening of state steering and rowing of security. The discussion proposes a tentative typology explaining the continued colonization of security spaces by the State using constituent attendant processes of compartmentalizing, crowding out and corralling.<p />",
language="",
issn="1362-4806",
doi="10.1177/1362480609354864",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1362480609354864"
}