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DZIUBANIAK (1) answer(s).
 
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ID:   156902


Secret agent, international policing, and anarchist terrorism: 1900–1914 / Jensen, Richard Bach   Journal Article
Jensen, Richard Bach Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract An unprecedented expansion of global anti-terrorist policing took place after 1900, although the security forces projected outside their borders by Russia, Italy, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Spain, and Argentina displayed an enormous diversity in size and effectiveness. Crucial to successful policing was how these countries improved their intelligence through recruiting and handling informers, maintained secrecy and good relations with local police, and handled the media. The British approach to anarchist control was arguably the most successful. Italian international policing was the most far-reaching, while the United States long remained the world's most under-policed large country. On examination, the view that anti-anarchist policing was a case of conservative imperial regimes versus the Western democracies loses validity. During this period, a general trend saw the transfer of anarchist surveillance from the hands of diplomats into those of interior ministry officials and the police, all in the name of greater centralization, professionalization, and efficiency.
Key Words International police  United States  Italy  Egypt  Spain  Switzerland 
Anarchism  Britain  Secret Agents  Agent Provocateur  Dziubaniak  Informers 
John Wilkie 
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