GUSTAV III:S POLIS I EUROPEISKT PERSPEKTIV
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Date
2019
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Publisher
LIR. journal
Abstract
In 1776 a new police establishment (”politiinrättning”) opened
in Stockholm – the first step towards a modern police system.
The reform was typical of its time. 17th century Europe entailed
a successive development of organizations and authorities that
increasingly came to resemble what we today understand as
“police”. Paris 1667 is often identified as a starting point, and
the Paris police was a common reference during the reformation
of the institutions maintaining order in the European
cities. In its time, as Foucault have noted, the Paris police was
seen as the ultimate expression of the monarchy, where the
power and control of the king were extended to individual
details of daily life in the capital. In the light of this historical
development, this article inquires into how the Swedish
“Kungliga poliskammaren” (royal police chamber) related to a
contemporary police discourse. What were the features of the
police chambers organization and field of activities, and what
were the similarities and differences compared to the French
police? What kind of critique was articulated towards it? The
study is based on mainly three types of Swedish material:
statements from the initiators of the police reform; letters from
the police commissioner to his superiors; critique towards the
police commissioner expressed in political writings and memoirs.
The comparative aspects of the article will take much of
its stand on Alan Williams comprehensive study of the French
police system, The Police of Paris 1718−1789 (1979), as well as
on research on the police on the British Islands, by, amongst
others, David G. Barrie, Clive Emsley och Philip Rawlings.