Artículos de revistas
Militarism, conflicts and indiscipline in police practices in the State of São Paulo during the First Brazilian Republic
Fecha
2012-09-01Registro en:
Historia Unisinos. Sao Leopoldo: Univ do Vale do Rio Dos Sinos, v. 16, n. 3, p. 346-356, 2012.
1519-3861
10.4013/htu.2012.163.07
WOS:000313209400008
WOS000313209400008.pdf
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
This article examines the challenges involved in the process of police militarization and implementation of police discipline in the State of São Paulo during the First Brazilian Republic (1889 to 1930). The implementation of a militarized police model, initiated by the 1906 French Military Mission, was not fully able to deal with indiscipline issues among policemen. Beyond creating problems of its own, such as fostering a corporatist culture and strengthening rigid hierarchies, military discipline prevented police forces to address new issues that would affect its practices. Documents in the São Paulo State Public Archive provides a window to the daily violence, the personal compromises, the institutional conflicts and the political meddling that was part of police life in the State of São Paulo at the turn of the century.