European Journal of Policing Studies

Article

Police Science in Germany: History and New Perspectives

Keywords Police Science in Germany, accountability, YouTube, public relations, Facebook, civil courage, violent assaults
Authors Joachim Kersten en Ansgar Burchard
DOI
Author's information

Joachim Kersten
Joachim Kersten is Professor and Head of Department of the Department of Police Science at the German Police University (Germany) since 2007 (Corresp: Joachim.Kersten@dhpol.de). He was appointed as DAAD Professor at Northwestern University, and served as guest professor in Maastricht/ NL, in Sydney/Australia, and in Tokyo/Japan. In Tokyo he received the Asahi Fellowship Award.

Ansgar Burchard
Ansgar Burchard studied Politics, Modern History and Sociology in Münster (Germany) and Vienna (Austria). He has a Master Degree in Politics and is a PhD candidate. Since 2012 he works as Senior Researcher for ‘COREPOL’ (EU FP7).
  • Abstract

      In the German speaking academic world Police Science (Polizeiwissenschaft) is a fairly new and little known area of social science. Accordingly, the academic status of police science is anything but firmly established but rather at a ‘hybrid’ stage of development. The very combination of policing and academic study/research seems to remain largely incompatible not only to police managers but also to main stream sociology. German police science differs substantially from the Anglo-American-Australian approach. One main difference pertains to legal traditions, others are due to historical and cultural developments that will be taken up in this descriptive essay. However, Anglo-American-Australian police theories have a lot to offer to German and European police scientists and this will be demonstrated. For a future common approach to an evolving European police science similar descriptions will be required from other European countries to establish a comparative foundation of joint EU police studies. Some of the principal dimensions of such a comparison will be sketched in this essay. It concludes with a presentation of empirically based police studies carried out by instructors and Master students at the newly founded German Police University in Münster. Topics are media coverage of clashes between police and demonstrators, a typology of third party intervention in cases of assault in public places and COREPOL (EU FP7), a comparative security research project aiming at an improvement of police-minority relations through means of restorative justice programs.

Please sign in to access the article



Did you receive an activation code but no access yet? Please activate your code here.

Forgot your password? Request new password.

Purchase access

You can purchase online access to this article. You will receive 24 hrs access @ € 17,50 (excl. VAT).

24 hrs access € 17,50 (excl. VAT)

Activate your code

If you have an access code, please activate it here.