BOOKS
Putting policing on the public agenda
PRAVEEN SWAMI
Policing A Democracy by R.K. Raghavan; Manohar, New Delhi, 1999; pages
312 (hardback).
THIS book presents a lucid comparative review of the management of crime
in the United States of America and India. Authored by R.K. Raghavan, a senior
Indian Police Service (IPS) officer who now heads the Central Bureau of
Investigation, it is important for at least two reasons other than its rich
empirical content.
For one, it places the ongoing debate over the practice of Indian policing
in its historical and social context. More important, it offers not
inconsiderable insights into how another police force operating in a democratic
context has sought to address suprisingly similar problems of ethnicity,
class and growing violence.
Despite the obvious differences in their historical evolution, Raghavan argues,
India and the U.S. face remarkably similar policing issues. The book surveys
the ways in which their very different police systems - one rooted in a
centralising colonial heritage and a cash-strapped present and the other
more resource-rich and structurally diffused - have coped with new problems.
In the build-up to India's independence, Raghavan shows, the major themes
of contemporary policing were already evident. In August 1893, Mumbai suffered
its first major communal riot, and the period between 1921 and 1947 was to
see police forces engaging similar violence on a regular basis. The U.S.,
interestingly, saw rising levels of race and class violence in the same period,
culminating in the 1917 East St. Louis massacre of blacks. Race violence
was to explode again from 1965, when riots broke out in the predominantly
black locality of Watts in Los Angeles.
Terrorism, too, was a theme that was to emerge in the pre-Independence period
in India. Although the U.S. had encountered terrorism through history, witnessing
the assassination of high political figures as India did, its experience
of the phenomenon in recent years is different from that of India. Raghavan
points out that the principal threat in the U.S. has come from domestic fascist
groups, fringe organisations, small, highly motivated terrorist cells rather
than widespread and brutal insurgencies, often with international backing.
Apart from these and other similar grand themes in policing, both police
forces have had to confront allegations of gender bias, corruption, and
insensitivity to local crime and community problems. As early as 1929, the
Wickersham Commission in the U.S. pointed out that third-degree methods were
"extensively practised". That the practice did not disappear was illustrated
in 1997, when Haitian immigrant Abner Louima was tortured in custody by the
New York Police Department.
Things were not significantly different in India. "It is tyrannical and
dishonest," the Police Commission of 1902 said of the British Indian police,
an observation the National Police Commission of 1977 said would "fully apply
to the present situation". Successive surveys of the public perception of
the police, Raghavan points out, have been discomfiting. Rudeness and
misbehaviour by the constabulary, refusal to register complaints and demands
for bribes have been shown to be endemic practices.
Police forces in the U.S. have attempted a number of initiatives to resolve
these problems. Raghavan surveys efforts, for example, to recruit more women
and candidates from minority groups. Although these efforts have had varying
levels of success, they stand in sharp contrast to the reluctance of the
Indian police forces to reach out consciously to communities traditionally
excluded from policing.
As important, initiatives to expose rank and file police personnel to higher
education and job-related training appear to have proliferated in the U.S.,
with significant results. Training programmes in the New York Police, for
example, were set in place after it recorded high rates of dismissal of parking
violation summons. These initiatives have obvious relevance to India. Sadly,
there seem to have been few similar efforts here.
Technology has played a critical role in upgrading the responses of the U.S.
police forces to crime. Since the U.S. set up its first crime laboratory
in 1923, similar institutions have proliferated. The Los Angeles Police
Department, for example, has over 20 police and 110 civilian specialists
at its disposal. Computerisation has spread deep through the system. Although
technology has been anything but free from problems, and delays in expert
processing of forensic evidence are a cause for concern, the facilities are
in stark contrast to those in India.
If the U.S.' efforts to reform and restructure its police forces have had
varying outcomes, the fact remains that serious initiatives to address the
problems have been made. Raghavan points to "two striking differences" in
dealing with corruption, which are illustrative of the attitude to other
issues as well.
The first is that there have been at least two public investigations of police
corruption, while India has seen "no credible in-depth analysis of the problem".
Second, "there is a greater transparency of public discussion of police
corruption in the U.S.... Whenever the issue is debated in public forums,
the tendency is toward vague generalisations."
THE lack of serious public debate on policing in India has had predictable
consequences. At the grassroots level, where U.S. police officials enjoy
credible union representation and well-established contractual rights, Indian
police personnel face terms of service "heavily weighted against the average
policeman". Little concerted pressure has been brought to bear on politicians
to bring about long-debated changes in the mode of appointment and autonomy
of senior police officials, including Directors-General of Police. And there
has been nothing resembling a political initiative to modernise police forces
and upgrade personnel skills.
Perhaps the most important point that emerges from Policing A Democracy
is that the entire spectrum of issues needs participative debate: policing
is too serious a business to be left to policemen and politicians alone.
At one level, this means more publicly available research on questions, to
answer which there is no hard data base. One question Raghavan poses, for
example, is whether the changing class and caste composition of the IPS has
led to changes in police attitudes to the rural poor.
Similarly, much of what passes for a critque of policing consists of polemic.
Writing of terrorism in Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir, Raghavan points out
that police excesses were rooted in the failure of conventional policing
methods. Despite the abundance of literature, there are as yet no coherent
ideas about the alternatives that need to be found.
The problems in Indian policing have little to do with lack of talent. Indian
police forces have seen a plethora of exceptional officers who have evolved
creative responses to new problems. Yet, these responses have rarely found
institutional expression, or led to structural reform. Without informed public
debate, that is unlikely to take place. Raghavan's book will hopefully attract
not only professionals, but journalists, politicians and other public figures.
Some parts of Raghavan's review may seem cursory to informed observers, perhaps
inevitable in a survey of this scope, and the editing on occasion leaves
something to be desired. For example, the Communist Party of India (Marxist),
rather than the CPI(ML), is held responsible for the recent naxalite violence
in Bihar, while sections on several State-specific problems in India are
somewhat dated. Despite these minor flaws, Policing A Democracy is
a vital initiative in bringing real debate on policing on to the agenda.
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